Picture Gallery

Relishing art is lust for life. Enjoy your journey of discovery through the artist’s motifs. You can enlarge each motif by clicking it.
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
His pictures, which easily exceed the square metre, are painted with meticulousness and incredible patience. Neumann creates new structures, and leads you into the world of imagination, which we have lost a long time ago. (...) He does not want to challenge the visitor intellectually, but emotionally.
The Constance "Kulturblätter"
Die Schlacht I
Original size
2 metre x 1,40 metre

Four-part fountain pen painting. The individual elements merge exactly.
 
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
The only true science of colours is the feeling.
Axel Neumann
 
Axel Neumann wants to paint what you cannot see. This is his motto. He sees areas of life which are barred to access. Through his paintings, he enters these voids.
Singener Wochenblatt
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
 
But to create is greater
than created to destroy.
Paradise Lost by John Milton (book 7, 606f)
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
PARADISE LOST - six-part fountain pen painting
Original size of the large format: 2 metres x 2.10 metres
 
Axel Neumanns abstract paintings are difficult to classify into the art world. But this particularly accentuates his inventive artistic talent full of expressiveness and subtlety.
The Schaffhausen Newspaper about the art show "Pills against sadness."
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
 
Words are just sound and air.
The crucial point is what we do.
Axel Neumann
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
 
To-day I wear these chains, and am here! To-morrow I shall be fetterless! — but where?
Edgar Allan Poe
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann
 
Have no fear of robbers or murderers. They are external dangers, petty dangers. We should fear ourselves. Prejudices are the real robbers; vices the real murderers. The great dangers are within us. Why worry about what threatens our heads or our purses? Let us think instead of what threatens our souls.
Victor Hugo in "Les Miserables"
Füllergemälde Axel Neumann