User:Artemesia/Karl A. Meyer

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Karl Andreas Meyer (* 23. Juli 1958 in Basel) is a Swiss painter and sculptor.

Life and work

Karl A. Meyer began his artistic work in New York City in the 1980s with large-format woodcuts inspired by Hopi iconography. At this time, the so-called East Village movement emerged where Meyer was represented in exhibitions and publications.[1]

He has been involved in Roland Hagenberg’s Raiding Project since 2010 and has exhibited his works alongside artists such as Hiroshi Hara[2], Ai Weiwei and Terunobu Fujimori, including the installation Cloud of Humanity, which consists of 15,000 clay figures and were exhibited in numerous exhibitions. They later resulted in large-scaled sculptures, among them Birdman which was erected in 2015 at the entrance to Raiding, birthplace of composer Franz Liszt. The book Crosby Street about Meyer's time in New York and his collaboration with the Austrian artist Roland Hagenberg were published by Art In Flow Verlag Berlin in 2022.

Selected Exhibitions

Selected Publications

  • Eastvillage: A Guide. A Documentary. Roland Hagenberg (editor), with essays by Alan Jones, Jo Shane, Nicolas A. Moufarrege, Carlo MacCormick u. a., Pelham Press, New York 1985
  • Karl A. Meyer, in: Happy Happy – A childrens’ coloring book by contemporary artists. Conceived and produced by Roland Hagenberg, Egret Publications, New York 1986, S. 15
  • Karl A. Meyer, Roland Hagenberg: RIO - Love and Life in Times of Executions. Polaroids and Poems. Art In Flow, Berlin 2019, ISBN 978-3-938457-45-0.
  • Karl A. Meyer, Terunobu Fujimori, Hiroshi Hara (Architekt), Roland Hagenberg: Raiding Project - Ten Fabulous Years. Art In Flow, Berlin 2019, ISBN 978-3-938457-46-7.
  • Karl A. Meyer, Roland Hagenberg: Crosby Street, Art In Flow, Berlin 2022, ISBN 978-3-938457-47-4
  • Official website
  • Literature by and about Artemesia/Karl A. Meyer in the German National Library catalogue
  • "Meyer, Karl A." SIKART Lexicon on art in Switzerland.

References

  1. ^ "Karl A. Meyer | Galerien Thayaland" (in German). Retrieved 2024-05-22.
  2. ^ development, Claudia Berg-design & web. "Hiroshi Hara + Karl A. Meyer". WELTREPORTER.NET. Retrieved 2024-05-22.