Ib Eisner

Ib Eisner ( born May 19, 1925 in Copenhagen; † 7 April 2003 in Frederiksberg) was a Danish artist. He began his artistic career in 1945 at the Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts Copenhagen, where he studied with Professors Aksel Jørgensen, Kræsten Iversen and Olaf Rude.

Eisner continued pure, unmixed colors often with rapid brushstrokes together. They transform his paintings in vibrant and dynamic surfaces, which nevertheless remain committed to the subject in all its virtuoso brushwork. He has worked more and more into image series, to go to the nuances of the change of lighting moods and seasons on the ground. To immediately capture this impression, he left with the Easel his studio and painted in nature. All his life he has chosen motives of its surroundings, his daily life that have made ​​him a central chroniclers of the Danish society in the second half of the 20th century.

Was particularly pronounced Eisner's interest in the traditional Danish Forest and Wildlife Park " Deer Park ". This offered him a varied repertoire of motifs and was the pivotal point in his life and his artistic creation. In his home country he was promoted mainly by its serene views from the traditional amusement park " Tivoli " and " Bakken " to a recognized artist in Denmark. Representations of " Sankt Hans Fire" and the island of Bornholm, are other key issues that he held in his art. In addition to landscape and figure representations were still life a fixture in the painting Eisner.

Ib Eisner has already made in his lifetime by numerous exhibitions mainly in the Scandinavian area a name. Most recently, he was honored in the fall of 2004 with a retrospective in Korsør / Denmark. But his work has been shown, among others, in the UK and Japan and internationally.

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