Field
Acrylic and oil on canvas by Franz Rentsch. 'Field' measures 140 x 160 cm and dates from 2022. This work has already been sold.
Untitled
Mixed media on canvas by Franz Rentsch. "Untitled" measures 70 x 50 cm and dates from 2021. This work has already been sold.
Pede
Acrylic and oil on canvas by Franz Rentsch. "Pede" measures 260 x 200 cm and dates from 2024. This work has already been sold.
curriculum vitae
Franz Rentsch
2022
Work in the painting room of the Bühnen Halle
2020
self-employed as a freelance artist, birth of son Falk Antony
2019
Master student of Sophia Schama
Founder and board member of Raum für Kunst Halle e. V. and exhibition space BLECH. Steintor
Acceptance into the Art-GOPEA funding program
2018
Diploma in the department and start of the master student studies with Sophia Schama
2012
Studied painting with Prof. Ute Pleuger and Prof. Sophia Schama at the Burg Giebichenstein Art Academy Halle
1992
Born in Lübben/Spreewald
Exhibitions
2024
Filter time Lausitz Art Collection, Senftenberg
/that's why Galerie Nord, Halle/Saale
2023
PARALLEL UNIVERSE Porte Leipzig
Claudia & Peter, BLECH art space, Halle/Saale
INSEL, ZFK Leipzig in Wirkbau Chemnitz
Old Bank Mural Street Arts Festival Mostar, Bosnia & Herzegovina
Summer Exhibition 23, Galerie Nord, Halle/Saale
2022
Selection by Energy, Galerie Paul Scherzer
Picture in Picture, collaboration with Ingo Albrecht-Hauser (Galaxy of New Arts), partition walls of BLECH. Raum für Kunst Halle e. V.
Dictions and Substrates, Printmaking Positions of Künstlerhaus 188 e. V. Halle at the BBK Künstlerhaus Karlsruhe
Exhibition Rausch, Leipzig Cotton Spinning Mill
2021
POSITIONS Berlin Art Fair, Galerie Paul Scherzer
MATCHES at the Reinbeckhallen Foundation - Collection for Contemporary Art, Berlin
trip and tease, the HO Gallery Magdeburg
2020
Gopea funding year 2019, Villa de Bank, Enschede/NL
MATCHES, a&o Kunsthalle Leipzig
Solo exhibition CROSSEN, Galerie Paul Scherzer, Halle (Saale)
2019
I think you walk a small delta., NYG West Galerie Leipzig
The Future is the New Thing, Saxony-Anhalt Art Foundation, Halle (Saale)
Master students, Blech. Art Space, Halle (Saale)
aquamediale 2019, Plain-Air Painting with Lasse Pook, Pop-up Studio in Lieberose / Brandenburg
Creatures and Powers, Blech. Kunstraum, Halle/Saale
2018
Parcours 2018, Diplomas of Art, Burg Gaerie in the Volkspark, Halle (Saale)
The Floating Floors, Diploma Exhibition, Burg Galerie im Volkspark, Halle (Saale)
2016
Linocut today X. Graphic Arts Prize of the City of Bietigheim-Bissingen
Nothing but the Truth, 50 paintings. Class of Ute Pleuger, Burg Galerie im Volkspark, Halle (Saale)
Anarchy and Care, Hoch + Partner Gallery for Woodcuts and Relief Printing, Leipzig
2014
Spektra 6, Luckau/Spreewald
Scholarships/Awards
2023
Culture on the Net+ of the Investment Bank Saxony-Anhalt
2021
Fellow of the Lausitzer Künstlerhaus Eisenhammer
Grant from the Investment Bank Saxony-Anhalt Kultur ans Netz for the studio project Memory Series
2020
Grant from the Investment Bank Saxony-Anhalt Kultur ans Netz for the studio project Metaphorik der Fenster
2019
Art-GOPEA funding program
Publications
2023
The future is the new thing, Mitteldeutscher Verlag
2022
Exhibition catalogue of scholarship holders of the Lausitzer Künstlerhaus Eisenhammer, Schlepzig
Exhibition catalogue Eberhard Dietzsch Art Prize 2022, Gera
2019
Exhibition catalogue art gopea 2019, Promoting Young Art, Dortmund
2018
Exhibition catalogue XVIII German international graphics - Triennale Frechen, Frechen
2016
Exhibition catalogue Nothing but the Truth, 50 x Painting, Class of Ute Pleuge, Halle
Exhibition catalogue Linocut today X, Graphic Prize of the City of Bietigheim Bissingen
2014
Engrams, Prize winners: Marietta Thier, Franz Rentsch of Spektrale 6, Luckau/Spreewald
Texts/Press
Miriam Albert on the works of Franz Rentsch
Form and shape have crossed the boundary of dissolution, they have leaped into the state of liquid. Sometimes the eye believes it can briefly grasp something, a field of color seems to blur into something familiar, but then it immediately slips away again, allowing itself to glide into the energetically shimmering field of the picture. A contemplation, a letting go, a beguiling oneself.
Where Norse mythological narratives originally served as the starting point for lush, meaningful images, the paintings have now gained a lighter quality, often focusing on individual hues. Airy spaces open up, and some images even consist largely of spaces. Yet they remain very dense. Time and again, they succeed in capturing and channeling the primal forces inherent in the myths.
Coverings, masking, and the subsequent unveiling are the foundations of an experimental game of overlay and underlay. Sheets of foil and pieces of tape cover sections of the primed canvas; liquid paint runs underneath as the artist paints, pools, and sometimes dries in puddles. Supposedly disruptive factors are paved the way as stylistic devices; they are welcomed into the work process and integrated into a dialogue. Following alien principles, unpredictable effects and idiosyncratic forms emerge while painting.
Free painting is a process with an uncertain outcome. Engaging in it—just as contemplating the paintings—requires great openness, curiosity, and even daring. It's as if embarking on an excursion into unfamiliar territory, and the map is initially just a single blank spot—namely, the canvas itself. Just as painting resembles walking through a landscape, the resulting painting can be read as a protocol-like excursion report or as a cartographic note. Thus, it's probably no coincidence that the paintings are painted on the floor, at ground level.
And again and again, moments of irritation arise. Almost overlooked, they unexpectedly break with the pictorial order into which the eye had already believed itself to fit. Suddenly, something else flashes forth from beneath the surface, a fleeting glimpse into an underworld. It is precisely these moments, however, that truly make the picture a picture. Although, or perhaps precisely because, they are disconcerting, they also form focal points and points of calm. They round out the picture in its lightness and enigmatic quality, making it profound and literally multi-layered, not easy to grasp.