Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Die Krone, 2025. Oil on table top, Ø 60 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Kein Schlaf - Kein Traum, 2025. Oil on alu-dibond, 72 cm x 90 cm
Thomas Sommer, Gott der Unterwerfung, der Selbstermächtigung und der Zeitverschwendung, series: Fünf alte Götter, 2025. Oil, lacquer, wood, acrylic glass. 130 cm x 72 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Organismus, 2018. Oil on canvas, 73 x 163 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Neujahrsansprache des Präsidenten, 2025. Oil on alu-dibond, 72 cm x 90 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rio hatte Recht, 2017. Oil on canvas, 123 x 133 cm
Thomas Sommer, Gott der transformen Rebellion der Auflösung und des dummen Zufalls, series: Fünf alte Götter, 2025. Oil, lacquer, wood, acrylic glass. 130 cm x 72 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Gott der Problemlösung durch Innovation und der Umverteilung von unten nach oben, Serie: Fünf alte Götter, Oil, lacquer, wood, acrylic glass. 130 cm x 72 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Thomas Sommer, Abgespeist, 2025. Oil on alu-dibond, 72 cm x 90 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
»Retrograde Amnesie« 2020 (polyptych), oil on canvas, 220 x 220 cm
Thomas Sommer, Rechnung ohne Wirt, exhibition view REITER | Leipzig 2025
Opening for the autumn tour of the SpinnereiGalleries:
Saturday, 13 September from 11:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. Sunday, 14 September from 11:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Thomas Sommer paints sublime landscapes inspired by the psychological or physical affect of nature’s grandeur. His work deliberately references the Romantic tradition of landscape paintings, borrowing from the colour palettes and gestures of art historical canons such as Caspar David Friedrich, Ivan Aivazovsky, Henry Fuseli or even J.M.W. Turner. Yet, painted two centuries after his cited sources, the landscape that Sommer depicts carries the mark of our present relationship to the environment, one that bears the indelible mark of human activity. His work seeks to situate the complicated posture of nature within our ethos as it continues to be the subject of much public anxiety.
As we live amidst a world that negotiates its existence within a heavily damaged natural environment, Sommer translates this reality into psychological states rather than definite sites painted with accuracy. While nature is ever presented as grandiose and imposing, there is a lingering feeling of dread that pervade these new works. Figures seem to exist in discomfort inside the scenes while the skies look ominous.
Certainly, the landscape is central to Sommer’s work, yet it exists inside each of the composition as a framed subject. Domestic elements, whether they are draping shapes or architectural structures encircle the depicted scenery. Ultimately, Thomas Sommer’s paintings are meant as a deeply psychological reflection on the malaise of our times as brought on by the imminent ecology tragedy.