The painter, sculptor, and printmaker Wolfgang Mattheuer is revealed as
one of the leading representatives of the "Leipzig School" in this
recollection of his work. Documenting how Mattheuer took part in all
exceptional art exhibitions in the German Democratic Republic, the study
also covers his contribution to the famed documenta 6 exhibit in Kassel
and how it attracted attention in the West. Detailing the individual
works that found their way into West German museums, this record also
highlights the largest stock of Mattheuer's graphic works in Chemnitz,
chronicling how the private collection of Hartmut Koch was acquired by
the city's Kunstsammlungen and how the artist's complete graphic oeuvre
became the property of the institution. Reconstructing the
accomplishments of a mastermind who produced nearly 900 sheets with more
than 400 inspirational motifs, this catalog presents his collection
through large-scale illustrations and scholarly essays. Mattheuer's
pictorial world, always figural but yet often mysterious, unfolds
through etchings, lithographs, woodcuts, and lino-cuts created over a
period of six decades.