Sabine Moritz Biography

Sabine Moritz is a German painter and prolific drawer who lives and works in Cologne, coming originally from East Germany. She uses her memory and documentary images to guide dense, hotly coloured brushmarks around certain chosen motifs, like helicopters, traumatic wartime events, cities, animals, or flowers. She is married to the renowned painter Gerhard Richter.

Early Years

Born in East Germany and mostly living in a suburb in the city of Jena, in 1985 she migrated to the West with her family. She lived firstly in Darmstadt, and then in Offenbach, where in 1989 she studied at Hochschule für Gestaltung. She then moved to Dusseldorf, where in 1991 she began studying at the Kunstakademie under the renowned painter Markus Lüpertz. The following year she entered one of the last classes of the about-to-retire Richter.

Sabine Moritz Artworks

Sabine Moritz’s oil paintings and pastel, charcoal, and pencil drawings reference a wide variety of subjects, ranging from different plants and aircrafts to chemical laboratories and peopled civic spaces. Newspaper clippings, magazine articles, and her own photographs are useful.

Within restlessly agitated painted fields, Moritz’s densely packed, brushed-on daubs and saturated smears intricately delineate these decontextualised, half-remembered forms and locations, aided by photographs.

The rendered images vary in paint quality and mark density. Some are glutinously embedded in the picture plane, as denying spatial depth and the subject’s ability to retreat from the viewer is a way of forcing time to freeze. Moritz takes her time contemplating the instant of the rendered action, and readjusting components within a turbulent sea of spidery marks. Sometimes she paints with oil paint onto lithographs, which include Sea King 101 (2018) and Sea King 98 (2017).

Some drawings are very easy to decipher as images, while others require much time to study and be aware of morphological nuances, especially in the large paintings. Examples include Tiger (2016), Three Skulls (2016), Snow (2016), Cabin 15 (2015), Dusk (2016), Ghost Town 1 (2016), Mine 1 (2021), Kamchatka 1 (2021), and Circus1 (2021).

Books

In 2009 Moritz showed the curator Hans Ulrich Obrist a group of over 100 pencil drawings that later became a book, JENA Düsseldorf, and an exhibition at the Kunsthaus Sans Titre in Potsdam in 2011.

Other published collections of images include Deeply Unaware (2019), Storm (2016), Helicopter (2014), Limbo (2013), and Roses (2010).

Exhibitions

Sabine Moritz has been the subject of many solo and group exhibitions. Solo exhibitions include:

Group exhibitions include:

  • Group Exhibition, Nature Painting Nature, Pilar Corrias, London (2024)
  • Passages, Galerie Thomas Zander, Cologne (2020)
  • Clearing, Martina Kaiser / Cologne Contemporary Art, Cologne (2018)
  • Age of Terror: Art Since 9/11, Imperial War Museum, London (2017)
  • It’s a Women’s World, Galerie Martina Kaiser, Cologne (2013)

Collections

Mortiz’s work is held in the collections of Tate Modern, London; Deutsche Bank Collection, Frankfurt; Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich; Faber-Castell Collection, Nuremberg; and Von der Heydt-Museum, Wuppertal.

Website

Sabine Moritz’s website can be found here.

Sabine Moritz FAQs

Where can I view Sabine Moritz’s artworks?

Sabine Moritz’s works are held in major public and private collections worldwide. Notable institutions include the Tate in London, which houses her piece 213 (House and Power Station) (1992–4). Her works have been exhibited at prominent galleries such as Gagosian in Beverly Hills and Rome, Marian Goodman Gallery in Paris and New York, and Pilar Corrias in London.

What themes does Sabine Moritz explore in her art?

Moritz’s work delves into the dynamics of memory, identity, and collective experience. Her paintings and drawings often reference personal memories, historical events, and cultural imagery, creating moments suspended in time.

What materials and techniques does Sabine Moritz use?

Moritz employs a variety of mediums, including oil on canvas, pastel, charcoal, and pencil. Her works range from abstract to figurative, often incorporating motifs drawn from personal memory and documentary images,

Where can I find more information about Sabine Moritz’s work?

For more information, you can visit her profiles on Gagosian, Marian Goodman Gallery, and Pilar Corrias.

Ocula | 2025

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