Isabell Schulte studied painting, graphic arts and fine arts in Leipzig, Berlin and Istanbul and completed her master-class studies with Christine Streuli at the University of the Arts in Berlin in 2016. She has been awarded numerous prizes and scholarships. She lives and works in Berlin.
Discipline
Drawing
Since 2018, Isabell Schulte has been producing a nine-part series of large-scale pencil drawings. In her drawings, individual characters line up in a supposed system of order that is repeatedly interrupted by elements that seem chaotic and random. Her drawings have their own rhythm, their own movement, sometimes fast, sometimes slow, sometimes tilting, reflecting, distorting, enlarging, reducing, or sometimes light, sometimes dark, which guide the viewer's gaze through the picture. This creates a simultaneity that can hardly be overviewed.
Year of participation
2021
»Since 2018 I have been working on a series of large-scale pencil drawings. In Viersen I will develop the last two parts of the 9-part series. Part I to part VII are black and white and the last two drawings part VIII and part IX will be colored.«
Website
Isabell Schulte studied painting, graphic arts and fine arts in Leipzig, Berlin and Istanbul and completed her master-class studies with Christine Streuli at the University of the Arts in Berlin in 2016. She has been awarded numerous prizes and scholarships. She lives and works in Berlin.
Discipline
Drawing
Since 2018, Isabell Schulte has been producing a nine-part series of large-scale pencil drawings. In her drawings, individual characters line up in a supposed system of order that is repeatedly interrupted by elements that seem chaotic and random. Her drawings have their own rhythm, their own movement, sometimes fast, sometimes slow, sometimes tilting, reflecting, distorting, enlarging, reducing, or sometimes light, sometimes dark, which guide the viewer's gaze through the picture. This creates a simultaneity that can hardly be overviewed.
Year of participation
2021
»Since 2018 I have been working on a series of large-scale pencil drawings. In Viersen I will develop the last two parts of the 9-part series. Part I to part VII are black and white and the last two drawings part VIII and part IX will be colored.«