Roland Koletzki - Bubble Future






Studied art history at Ecole du Louvre and specialised in contemporary art for over 25 years.
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 131479 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Roland Koletzki, Bubble Future, acrylic on wood, 24 cm by 30 cm, signed, 2026, original edition, Germany, directly from the artist, in excellent condition.
Description from the seller
This expressive work in the style of pop-surrealism combines nostalgia with a subtle futuristic note. At the center is a mysterious figure whose calm, almost piercing gaze immediately draws the viewer in. The floating soap bubbles appear as fragile visions—fleeting symbols of the future, illusion, and transience.
The warm palette of pink and orange tones contrasts effectively with the dark background and intensifies the emotional depth of the subject. Elements of retro aesthetics meet a modern, almost cinematic staging, creating a tense, dynamic visual world.
"Bubble Future" invites the viewer to linger between reality and imagination and to discover their own interpretations. A work with a strong presence that sets a distinctive accent in both contemporary and classical interiors.
------------------------
Acrylic on wood, 24 cm x 30 cm, signed on the back in pencil with the artist's stamp. Koletzki, 2026
----------------------------
Roland Koletzki (born 1966) is a German painter and freelance graphic artist living in Berlin, whose work explores the psychological tensions of contemporary society. His paintings deal with themes such as existential anxiety, decadence, and the interplay between beauty and decay, conjuring a world in the tension between crisis and aesthetic excess. Koletzki's visual language is characterized by a sensual yet unsettling atmosphere that combines symbolic imagery with strong emotional depth. His compositions often draw on art-historical references, including the visionary intensity of Hieronymus Bosch, the metaphysical spaces of Giorgio de Chirico, and the poetic mysticism of the Symbolists. Since the late 1980s, he has exhibited in various galleries in Berlin and beyond, with early exhibitions in Leipzig and ongoing activity in the German art scene into the 1990s. Koletzki's work is distinguished by a blend of irrationality, narrative ambiguity, and multi-layered meaning, inviting viewers into enigmatic, often dreamlike worlds that resist easy interpretation.
This expressive work in the style of pop-surrealism combines nostalgia with a subtle futuristic note. At the center is a mysterious figure whose calm, almost piercing gaze immediately draws the viewer in. The floating soap bubbles appear as fragile visions—fleeting symbols of the future, illusion, and transience.
The warm palette of pink and orange tones contrasts effectively with the dark background and intensifies the emotional depth of the subject. Elements of retro aesthetics meet a modern, almost cinematic staging, creating a tense, dynamic visual world.
"Bubble Future" invites the viewer to linger between reality and imagination and to discover their own interpretations. A work with a strong presence that sets a distinctive accent in both contemporary and classical interiors.
------------------------
Acrylic on wood, 24 cm x 30 cm, signed on the back in pencil with the artist's stamp. Koletzki, 2026
----------------------------
Roland Koletzki (born 1966) is a German painter and freelance graphic artist living in Berlin, whose work explores the psychological tensions of contemporary society. His paintings deal with themes such as existential anxiety, decadence, and the interplay between beauty and decay, conjuring a world in the tension between crisis and aesthetic excess. Koletzki's visual language is characterized by a sensual yet unsettling atmosphere that combines symbolic imagery with strong emotional depth. His compositions often draw on art-historical references, including the visionary intensity of Hieronymus Bosch, the metaphysical spaces of Giorgio de Chirico, and the poetic mysticism of the Symbolists. Since the late 1980s, he has exhibited in various galleries in Berlin and beyond, with early exhibitions in Leipzig and ongoing activity in the German art scene into the 1990s. Koletzki's work is distinguished by a blend of irrationality, narrative ambiguity, and multi-layered meaning, inviting viewers into enigmatic, often dreamlike worlds that resist easy interpretation.
