The Prague Post - German artist who 'painted with nails', Guenther Uecker, dead at 95

EUR -
AED 4.280149
AFN 74.589844
ALL 96.103506
AMD 438.585722
AOA 1068.726117
ARS 1616.513306
AUD 1.657319
AWG 2.097827
AZN 1.983098
BAM 1.948627
BBD 2.345864
BDT 143.136316
BHD 0.439917
BIF 3461.997697
BMD 1.16546
BND 1.484789
BOB 8.047924
BRL 5.944664
BSD 1.164663
BTN 107.526089
BWP 15.626602
BYN 3.399583
BYR 22843.007863
BZD 2.342466
CAD 1.614616
CDF 2681.722235
CHF 0.92273
CLF 0.026584
CLP 1046.268001
CNY 7.960205
CNH 7.968084
COP 4250.489379
CRC 541.782289
CUC 1.16546
CUP 30.884679
CVE 110.54355
CZK 24.392545
DJF 207.125263
DKK 7.472682
DOP 70.68518
DZD 154.38958
EGP 62.072847
ERN 17.481894
ETB 181.374636
FJD 2.58138
FKP 0.880192
GBP 0.870523
GEL 3.129258
GGP 0.880192
GHS 12.837525
GIP 0.880192
GMD 85.078271
GNF 10232.735437
GTQ 8.910199
GYD 243.673554
HKD 9.128678
HNL 31.024569
HRK 7.531231
HTG 152.690693
HUF 376.849607
IDR 19830.469655
ILS 3.599359
IMP 0.880192
INR 107.551815
IQD 1526.752056
IRR 1532579.354174
ISK 143.806194
JEP 0.880192
JMD 183.34505
JOD 0.826285
JPY 184.993987
KES 150.808729
KGS 101.919296
KHR 4678.154599
KMF 494.732249
KPW 1048.900686
KRW 1729.46006
KWD 0.360372
KYD 0.970573
KZT 556.853329
LAK 25596.40882
LBP 104366.905999
LKR 367.128487
LRD 214.669545
LSL 19.364124
LTL 3.441299
LVL 0.704975
LYD 7.394846
MAD 10.844557
MDL 20.056049
MGA 4822.085966
MKD 61.616474
MMK 2447.472605
MNT 4162.53503
MOP 9.396624
MRU 46.738365
MUR 54.216779
MVR 18.018145
MWK 2024.403485
MXN 20.350661
MYR 4.644315
MZN 74.542802
NAD 19.358408
NGN 1607.145284
NIO 42.807425
NOK 11.16251
NPR 172.044485
NZD 2.002525
OMR 0.448107
PAB 1.164653
PEN 3.966933
PGK 5.022999
PHP 69.382167
PKR 325.163388
PLN 4.255235
PYG 7555.187033
QAR 4.249279
RON 5.093409
RSD 117.34427
RUB 91.552352
RWF 1702.153724
SAR 4.373528
SBD 9.380213
SCR 17.342188
SDG 700.441569
SEK 10.871477
SGD 1.486308
SLE 28.728239
SOS 666.061467
SRD 43.767645
STD 24122.660353
STN 24.987453
SVC 10.191482
SYP 128.840806
SZL 19.36408
THB 37.434205
TJS 11.070424
TMT 4.079109
TND 3.370556
TRY 51.853042
TTD 7.89958
TWD 36.986328
TZS 3015.627307
UAH 50.473474
UGX 4308.934142
USD 1.16546
UYU 47.315816
UZS 14253.571085
VES 552.913721
VND 30689.464518
VUV 139.180276
WST 3.229387
XAF 653.514763
XAG 0.015846
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.149713
XCG 2.099109
XDR 0.814629
XOF 657.319107
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.049524
ZAR 19.164992
ZMK 10490.533013
ZMW 22.274853
ZWL 375.277511
  • BCC

    4.5200

    79.23

    +5.7%

  • JRI

    0.1600

    12.85

    +1.25%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.29

    +0.67%

  • BCE

    0.2900

    24.12

    +1.2%

  • CMSD

    0.2100

    22.5

    +0.93%

  • GSK

    1.5300

    57.37

    +2.67%

  • BTI

    1.1500

    59.95

    +1.92%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RIO

    3.7900

    98.45

    +3.85%

  • NGG

    2.4400

    89.96

    +2.71%

  • BP

    -1.3500

    45.89

    -2.94%

  • RELX

    0.5700

    33.93

    +1.68%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5000

    15.25

    -3.28%

  • VOD

    0.4600

    15.77

    +2.92%

  • AZN

    3.4600

    204.27

    +1.69%

German artist who 'painted with nails', Guenther Uecker, dead at 95
German artist who 'painted with nails', Guenther Uecker, dead at 95 / Photo: Patrik STOLLARZ - AFP/File

German artist who 'painted with nails', Guenther Uecker, dead at 95

German sculptor and installation artist Guenther Uecker, best known for his mesmerising artworks using thousands of nails, has died at age 95.

Text size:

His works, created from the 1950s saw him hammer nails into furniture, TV sets, canvases and a tree trunk, creating undulating patterns, the illusion of movement and intricate shadow plays.

While he became famous for using a hammer instead of a brush to "paint with nails", Uecker, considered one of Germany's most influential artists, later also used other materials, from sand to stones and ash.

Uecker was born on March 13, 1930, in Wendorf in what is now the eastern state of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. He grew up on Wustrow, a peninsula north of the Baltic Sea port of Wismar, experiencing the horrors of World War II.

A few days before the German surrender, the ship "Cap Arcona" sank near his hometown, with 4,500 concentration camp prisoners on board.

Uecker helped bury the dead who washed up on shore, a traumatic experience he addressed decades later in his work "New Wustrow Cloths".

Fearing the advance of the Russian Red Army, a young Uecker nailed shut the door of his family home from the inside to protect his mother and sisters.

Uecker remembered that "panicked, instinctive act" in a 2015 TV documentary with public broadcaster Hessischer Rundfunk.

"That had a profound impact on me and was perhaps a key experience for my later artistic work."

- 'Intrusiveness and aggression' -

Even as a child, Uecker was constantly drawing.

This displeased his father, a farmer, who thought his son was "a failure and not quite normal", Uecker recalled in a 2010 interview with the Rheinische Post daily.

As a young man in East Germany, Uecker in 1949 began an apprenticeship as a painter and advertising designer, then studied fine art.

But Uecker, who wanted to study under his artistic idol Otto Pankok, fled East Germany in 1953 and transferred to the University of Dusseldorf.

Uecker, who created his first nail paintings in the late 1950s, later said that the nail attracted him for its "intrusiveness, coupled with a strong potential for aggression", something he said he also carried within himself.

In 1961, he joined the art group Zero of Otto Piene and Heinz Mack, who sought to counter the devastation of World War II with a spirit of optimism and lightness.

Zero aimed to return art to its absolute basics, they wrote in their manifesto: "Zero is the beginning."

Uecker's work often addressed contemporary issues. His ash paintings, for example, were a response to the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear accident.

After xenophobic riots targeted migrants in a suburb of Rostock in 1992, he created a series called "The Tortured Man" which was exhibited in 57 countries.

Uecker's works are exhibited in museums and galleries, but he also designed cathedral church windows and the prayer room of Berlin's Reichstag building housing the lower house of parliament.

Asked once whether he was bothered by being known simply as the nail artist, he said he wasn't. "Something like that is necessary for identification ... People need a symbol, an emblem."

A.Slezak--TPP