The Japan Times - German artist who 'painted with nails', Guenther Uecker, dead at 95

EUR -
AED 4.321353
AFN 77.835141
ALL 96.56804
AMD 449.139216
ANG 2.106728
AOA 1079.014233
ARS 1695.184074
AUD 1.768936
AWG 2.118021
AZN 1.992233
BAM 1.958194
BBD 2.369196
BDT 143.755719
BGN 1.958299
BHD 0.443582
BIF 3474.847465
BMD 1.176678
BND 1.516554
BOB 8.157972
BRL 6.356064
BSD 1.176338
BTN 106.687409
BWP 15.535858
BYN 3.440105
BYR 23062.89483
BZD 2.365792
CAD 1.618962
CDF 2635.759666
CHF 0.934724
CLF 0.027393
CLP 1074.672004
CNY 8.300875
CNH 8.284524
COP 4477.661031
CRC 588.419252
CUC 1.176678
CUP 31.181975
CVE 110.399947
CZK 24.318409
DJF 209.476052
DKK 7.470713
DOP 74.721335
DZD 152.586923
EGP 55.83409
ERN 17.650175
ETB 183.084693
FJD 2.654467
FKP 0.880448
GBP 0.878426
GEL 3.179851
GGP 0.880448
GHS 13.527535
GIP 0.880448
GMD 85.897809
GNF 10229.50399
GTQ 9.011015
GYD 246.102914
HKD 9.156263
HNL 30.984874
HRK 7.540624
HTG 154.128398
HUF 384.849077
IDR 19612.9917
ILS 3.781332
IMP 0.880448
INR 106.72737
IQD 1540.983615
IRR 49564.636213
ISK 148.202602
JEP 0.880448
JMD 187.989789
JOD 0.834311
JPY 182.339837
KES 151.791809
KGS 102.900799
KHR 4706.75328
KMF 493.637249
KPW 1059.010108
KRW 1726.258215
KWD 0.36091
KYD 0.98029
KZT 606.721624
LAK 25490.157785
LBP 105339.96185
LKR 363.724597
LRD 207.623788
LSL 19.736525
LTL 3.474425
LVL 0.711761
LYD 6.376795
MAD 10.797398
MDL 19.856102
MGA 5243.409259
MKD 61.642135
MMK 2470.160628
MNT 4172.342754
MOP 9.429807
MRU 46.793197
MUR 54.068087
MVR 18.122306
MWK 2039.793333
MXN 21.158859
MYR 4.815557
MZN 75.201136
NAD 19.736525
NGN 1708.995639
NIO 43.292919
NOK 11.917762
NPR 170.699654
NZD 2.02867
OMR 0.452448
PAB 1.176338
PEN 3.961242
PGK 4.999111
PHP 69.218155
PKR 329.665165
PLN 4.221428
PYG 7900.657335
QAR 4.28724
RON 5.092547
RSD 117.376006
RUB 93.251745
RWF 1712.708077
SAR 4.414871
SBD 9.621406
SCR 16.951255
SDG 707.773329
SEK 10.908861
SGD 1.515962
SHP 0.882813
SLE 28.387382
SLL 24674.360085
SOS 671.120341
SRD 45.431799
STD 24354.865265
STN 24.529984
SVC 10.292581
SYP 13010.15766
SZL 19.740129
THB 37.006108
TJS 10.816413
TMT 4.130141
TND 3.440205
TOP 2.833159
TRY 50.240982
TTD 7.983759
TWD 36.839797
TZS 2921.109631
UAH 49.721477
UGX 4190.121777
USD 1.176678
UYU 46.096346
UZS 14231.395685
VES 314.690552
VND 30970.173058
VUV 142.528259
WST 3.26585
XAF 656.759788
XAG 0.0185
XAU 0.000272
XCD 3.180032
XCG 2.119991
XDR 0.818254
XOF 656.759788
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.636821
ZAR 19.744603
ZMK 10591.521493
ZMW 27.261323
ZWL 378.889935
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • GSK

    0.4000

    49.21

    +0.81%

  • NGG

    0.6400

    75.57

    +0.85%

  • BP

    0.0000

    35.26

    0%

  • BCC

    -0.8350

    75.675

    -1.1%

  • AZN

    1.3500

    91.18

    +1.48%

  • RIO

    -0.0800

    75.58

    -0.11%

  • CMSD

    0.0600

    23.31

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    0.1861

    23.58

    +0.79%

  • RYCEF

    0.2200

    14.82

    +1.48%

  • JRI

    0.0435

    13.61

    +0.32%

  • BTI

    0.5700

    57.67

    +0.99%

  • RBGPF

    -3.4900

    77.68

    -4.49%

  • RELX

    0.8500

    41.23

    +2.06%

  • VOD

    0.1950

    12.785

    +1.53%

  • CMSC

    0.0200

    23.32

    +0.09%

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."

T.Sasaki--JT