3. Exhibition

Various Artists | Spring Visions

21 March 2026 - 18 April 2026

In  Spring Visions, artistic positions come together — radically different in approach, yet united by one shared focus: an intense engagement with perception, emotion, and pictorial space.


Artist and PhD researcher Veronika Szendro connects contemporary art with religious and spiritual inquiry. With an academic background in Pécs and international exhibitions from London to Chicago, she explores the intersections of aesthetics, transcendence, and cultural transformation. Her works open spaces between intellectual reflection and sensory experience.


With a very different sensibility, we encounter Gerti Landwehr. She understands her portraits as spaces of resonance. At their center is the gaze — that silent gesture capable of conveying intimacy, distance, trust, or restraint. In the tension between bold brushstrokes and transparent layers, faces emerge that do not impose meaning but enter into dialogue. Her painting is an ethics of seeing — an invitation to empathy and attentive perception.


Isolde Mischkot moves stylistically between figuration and abstraction, collage and sculpted pop-art motifs. Through her exploration of abstract expressionism, she developed her own technique, which she calls “CUT ACTION PAINTING / CUT PAINTING.” Powerful colors, energy, and movement define her works — an invitation to rediscover vitality, mental strength, and a positive outlook.


Maximilian Otte celebrates the principle of “More is more.” His works are exaggerated, glamorous, ironic, and deliberately artificial. Somewhere between pool parties, supermodels, and tropical opulence, he creates pop-cultural fantasy worlds where tigers, butterflies, and champagne naturally belong. Reality plays no role here — it is about imagination, excess, and a kind of fantastic realism in a pop-art style.


Maya Salamatova perceives change as the only constant. Through fluid colors and hazy lines, she explores the transience of the human inner world—a delicate play between self-assertion and fragility. For Salamatova, the canvas is a space of metamorphosis where the inexpressible takes form, positioning art as a steady bridge within the flux of time.


Vienna-based artist Julia Dubovyk focuses on light, space, and emotion. Within reduced, symbolically abstract visual worlds, she creates quiet, meditative moments. Shaped by time spent in Barcelona and New York, she combines architectural clarity with poetic sensitivity. Her works invite the viewer to pause and encounter memory.


This exhibition unfolds as a dialogue between opulence and reduction, between gaze and surface, between fantasy and inner experience.

We warmly invite you to discover our artists as part of current exhibition.