
Lorelei - 12-07-18 by Corné Akkers
Lorelei takes its title from the legendary Rhine cliff and channels something of that location's charged, ambiguous atmosphere into abstract form. Corné Akkers builds the composition from overlapping planes of shadow and muted colour — shapes that suggest geological mass or the surface of water without committing fully to either. The interplay of light and dark is the real subject here: depth created not through perspective but through the careful modulation of tone across a surface that seems to hold its breath. Quietly arresting.
On canvas, Akkers' tonal abstractions find exactly the right ground. The textured weave adds physical depth that reinforces the compositional depth within the image, and the warmth of the canvas print print gives the work a weight and presence that suits its elemental subject.
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Lorelei - 12-07-18 by Corné Akkers
Lorelei takes its title from the legendary Rhine cliff and channels something of that location's charged, ambiguous atmosphere into abstract form. Corné Akkers builds the composition from overlapping planes of shadow and muted colour — shapes that suggest geological mass or the surface of water without committing fully to either. The interplay of light and dark is the real subject here: depth created not through perspective but through the careful modulation of tone across a surface that seems to hold its breath. Quietly arresting.
On canvas, Akkers' tonal abstractions find exactly the right ground. The textured weave adds physical depth that reinforces the compositional depth within the image, and the warmth of the canvas print print gives the work a weight and presence that suits its elemental subject.
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Lorelei takes its title from the legendary Rhine cliff and channels something of that location's charged, ambiguous atmosphere into abstract form. Corné Akkers builds the composition from overlapping planes of shadow and muted colour — shapes that suggest geological mass or the surface of water without committing fully to either. The interplay of light and dark is the real subject here: depth created not through perspective but through the careful modulation of tone across a surface that seems to hold its breath. Quietly arresting.
On canvas, Akkers' tonal abstractions find exactly the right ground. The textured weave adds physical depth that reinforces the compositional depth within the image, and the warmth of the canvas print print gives the work a weight and presence that suits its elemental subject.























