Artists

From drawings on the tablet to sold-out art exhibitions

Art has always been an important way for Nicole Blattmann to express her emotions. Various encounters with refugees motivated the Swiss artist to take a step into the public eye. Today, Blattmann is considered a sought-after artist and sells her painted works around the world for mid-four-figure sums.

With self-determination: Artist from the village now in demand internationally

Dark colors combined with bright piercing tones, meter-long canvases full of abstract patterns. When Julia Dedicata reaches for her brush and her tubes of paint, she sinks into colorful chaos. Even as a child, she felt the strong fascination of creative art. In the meantime, the mother of three has fully focused on her creative work and is celebrating her first international successes. Over 21 works within a few months have already changed hands for four-figure sums – and demand is rising.

Interview with Andrea Kainer

Andrea Kainer has always possessed a creative nature, but she came to her true destiny via detours. At the age of 28, there was a "mental breakdown" in her life. Through painting, she found her very own kind of therapy, which was ultimately a reanimation of her own world. Through the creative process, she loses all sense of space and time and enters a kind of meditative state to process the spiritual world.‍

Interview with Nicole Blattmann

The Swiss artist Nicole Blattmann took in several refugees at her home. The fate of these people was the source of inspiration for her art. After the artist initially painted only digitally on the iPad and already won an art award, her works on canvas also became a great success. After sold-out exhibitions, art galleries and journalists are now interested in the artist's moving stories.

Interview with Leyla Milou

Leyla Milou created over 120 paintings and sculptures within two years. Her works are not only a tribute to femininity but a celebration of liveliness that defies stagnation. At her first exhibitions, art experts rated her works unusually high from the very beginning, and she succeeded in inspiring art collectors and gaining international attention. She sold several paintings within a short time at her first exhibitions.

Interview with Sandra Plaar

A life-threatening illness at the age of 23 radically changes Sandra Plaar's life. She drops out of law school, becomes a teacher, later an art therapist, and writes two books. But it was in art that she found her inner home. She fulfills her lifelong dream of devoting herself entirely to art. Her exhibitions became a great success.

Kobransky: From school dropout to million-dollar art business‍

Magnificent zebras, a Karl Lagerfeld, and the pyramids of Egypt. The artworks of Kobransky from Berlin have one thing in common: they all contain gold leaf as a key feature. In just five years, Kobransky has made it into the high circles of the art elite. Today, he exhibits at luxurious venues, sells works to Las Vegas, and has purchased the gallery where he exhibited his first paintings. In just 24 months, an artist's career grew from zero art sales to numerous sales every month. A career with an announcement.