Thomas Steyer - Soft Collapse

07
days
17
hours
13
minutes
20
seconds
Current bid
€ 2
No reserve price
Catherine Mikolajczak
Expert
Selected by Catherine Mikolajczak

Studied art history at Ecole du Louvre and specialised in contemporary art for over 25 years.

Gallery Estimate  € 1,600 - € 2,000
13 other people are watching this object
esBidder 0957
€2
ieBidder 9835
€1

Catawiki Buyer Protection

Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details

Trustpilot 4.4 | 124896 reviews

Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.

Thomas Steyer's original oil on canvas titled Soft Collapse, a 120 by 80 cm landscape in white, blue, green, red and purple tones, dated 2024, signed and sold directly by the artist from Germany.

AI-assisted summary

Description from the seller

Soft Collapse
Technique: oil on canvas

Measurements
Canvas size: 120 × 80 cm (without stretcher frame)
Canvas size: 132 × 92 cm

Technology & Materials
oil on canvas
Executed with brushes

Shipping
Rolled, wrapped in bubble wrap, and securely shipped in a box.

Description
"Soft Collapse" is a large-format oil painting supported by a bright, multilayered field of color. Delicate shades of white, blue, and green overlap, creating an open, translucent atmosphere. In the upper part of the image, the color activity condenses into a restless band of green, turquoise, orange, and darker accents. From there, shapes, lines, and remnants of color gradually detach and move downward, where they continue to split and scatter. The surface appears soft and glazing in some areas, while in others it is dense and tangible. The painting captures a state of yielding, a moment when order does not break abruptly but slowly loses tension and dissolves into movement.


Tom Steyer's sure hand and skilled brushwork at first deceive the viewer into thinking that something they know and recognize is being eloquently portrayed by a master realist artist.

If only one stands a little closer or further away, it will all become something.

The best way to identify what is going on in Steyer's paintings is to think of him as an Abstract Realist.

The current paintings showcase Steyer's uncanny ability to identify and organize his deepest nameless impulses, previewing them if you like, then faithfully realize them in paint, at speed.

Ted Blackall (2003)


About the artist – Summary

I am Thomas Steyer, born in 1955 in Berlin, and I received my artistic training in Berlin and London. After years in London and Sydney, I now work in the Markgräflerland south of Freiburg. My painting evolved from realism to abstract expressionism, in which I translate feelings, thoughts, and impressions directly into color and form. The works are created intuitively and provide viewers with space for their own sensations, often far beyond the visible.

About the artist – Detailed version

Thomas Steyer is a contemporary German painter whose artistic career has been characterized by a continuous development between precision and free imagery. During his art studies in London, he developed an early fascination with objects with reflective surfaces. Household and office items, kitchen utensils, and bicycle parts became central motifs in his oil painting.

After completing his studies, Steyer independently sought clients and developed an unusual sales model. He painted technically inspired objects such as ball bearings, radiator figures, or microphones and sold these works directly to manufacturers. At the same time, he contacted musicians he admired, borrowed their instruments, and created large-scale paintings of guitars. Some of these works were later used for album covers, including the image of Mark Knopfler's Steel Guitar for Dire Straits' album 'Brothers in Arms.'

In 1984, Steyer discovered the work with the airbrush through a chance encounter with the English illustrator Tom Stimpson. The new technique opened up new possibilities for him and led to a successful phase in advertising illustration, during which he distinguished himself particularly through photorealistic representations.

In 1989, Steyer moved to Australia after thirteen years in London and settled in Sydney. There, he continued working as an illustrator and freelance painter. Over time, both activities developed in different directions. While his illustrations became increasingly realistic, his free painting shifted more and more towards abstraction. Large, color-intensive works emerged as a conscious counterpoint to his precise, figurative commissioned work.

In 1995, Steyer began to engage intensively with digital image creation. He was among the first illustrators in Australia to switch their entire workflow to digital systems. This step enabled him to have an international focus in his work and a considerable independence from geographical boundaries.

After a total of 27 years abroad, Steyer returned to Germany in 2003 and settled in the Markgräflerland between Freiburg and Basel. He has lived and worked there ever since. The experiences from different countries, fields of work, and artistic phases influence his current painting and form the basis for a body of work that conveys a balance between structure and freedom, control and intuition.

You can find more insights at:
www.thomas-steyer.de

Soft Collapse
Technique: oil on canvas

Measurements
Canvas size: 120 × 80 cm (without stretcher frame)
Canvas size: 132 × 92 cm

Technology & Materials
oil on canvas
Executed with brushes

Shipping
Rolled, wrapped in bubble wrap, and securely shipped in a box.

Description
"Soft Collapse" is a large-format oil painting supported by a bright, multilayered field of color. Delicate shades of white, blue, and green overlap, creating an open, translucent atmosphere. In the upper part of the image, the color activity condenses into a restless band of green, turquoise, orange, and darker accents. From there, shapes, lines, and remnants of color gradually detach and move downward, where they continue to split and scatter. The surface appears soft and glazing in some areas, while in others it is dense and tangible. The painting captures a state of yielding, a moment when order does not break abruptly but slowly loses tension and dissolves into movement.


Tom Steyer's sure hand and skilled brushwork at first deceive the viewer into thinking that something they know and recognize is being eloquently portrayed by a master realist artist.

If only one stands a little closer or further away, it will all become something.

The best way to identify what is going on in Steyer's paintings is to think of him as an Abstract Realist.

The current paintings showcase Steyer's uncanny ability to identify and organize his deepest nameless impulses, previewing them if you like, then faithfully realize them in paint, at speed.

Ted Blackall (2003)


About the artist – Summary

I am Thomas Steyer, born in 1955 in Berlin, and I received my artistic training in Berlin and London. After years in London and Sydney, I now work in the Markgräflerland south of Freiburg. My painting evolved from realism to abstract expressionism, in which I translate feelings, thoughts, and impressions directly into color and form. The works are created intuitively and provide viewers with space for their own sensations, often far beyond the visible.

About the artist – Detailed version

Thomas Steyer is a contemporary German painter whose artistic career has been characterized by a continuous development between precision and free imagery. During his art studies in London, he developed an early fascination with objects with reflective surfaces. Household and office items, kitchen utensils, and bicycle parts became central motifs in his oil painting.

After completing his studies, Steyer independently sought clients and developed an unusual sales model. He painted technically inspired objects such as ball bearings, radiator figures, or microphones and sold these works directly to manufacturers. At the same time, he contacted musicians he admired, borrowed their instruments, and created large-scale paintings of guitars. Some of these works were later used for album covers, including the image of Mark Knopfler's Steel Guitar for Dire Straits' album 'Brothers in Arms.'

In 1984, Steyer discovered the work with the airbrush through a chance encounter with the English illustrator Tom Stimpson. The new technique opened up new possibilities for him and led to a successful phase in advertising illustration, during which he distinguished himself particularly through photorealistic representations.

In 1989, Steyer moved to Australia after thirteen years in London and settled in Sydney. There, he continued working as an illustrator and freelance painter. Over time, both activities developed in different directions. While his illustrations became increasingly realistic, his free painting shifted more and more towards abstraction. Large, color-intensive works emerged as a conscious counterpoint to his precise, figurative commissioned work.

In 1995, Steyer began to engage intensively with digital image creation. He was among the first illustrators in Australia to switch their entire workflow to digital systems. This step enabled him to have an international focus in his work and a considerable independence from geographical boundaries.

After a total of 27 years abroad, Steyer returned to Germany in 2003 and settled in the Markgräflerland between Freiburg and Basel. He has lived and worked there ever since. The experiences from different countries, fields of work, and artistic phases influence his current painting and form the basis for a body of work that conveys a balance between structure and freedom, control and intuition.

You can find more insights at:
www.thomas-steyer.de

Details

Artist
Thomas Steyer
Edition
Original
Sold by
Direct from the artist
Sold with frame
No
Title of artwork
Soft Collapse
Technique
Oil painting
Signature
Signed
Country of Origin
Germany
Year
2024
Condition
Excellent condition
Colour
Blue, Green, Purple, Red, White
Height
120 cm
Width
80 cm
Weight
3 kg
Depiction/Theme
Landscape
Style
Abstract
Period
2020+
GermanyVerified
4
Objects sold
Private

Similar objects

For you in

Modern & Contemporary Art