Mediation by Gerhard Richter
Mediation
The Blurred Boundary Between Abstraction and Reality in Richter’s Mediation
Few artists have interrogated the limits of painting with as much rigor as Gerhard Richter. In Mediation, Richter deploys his signature technique of smudged, layered strokes to dissolve form into pure chromatic vibration. The work belongs to a series where he deliberately obscured photographic source material—here, likely a landscape or architectural subject—until only traces of the original remain. What emerges is neither pure abstraction nor faithful representation but a tense negotiation between the two. The painting’s title itself suggests this duality: mediation as both a process of intervention and a state of reconciliation.
Richter’s method in works like Mediation involved projecting photographs onto canvas, tracing their outlines, then systematically erasing detail through vigorous brushwork. As MoMA’s retrospective noted, this approach allowed him to “simultaneously create and destroy” the image, forcing viewers to confront the instability of visual perception. The 30×40 cm format of this print preserves the intimacy of the original’s scale, where the tension between clarity and dissolution becomes most palpable. Unlike his monochromatic Grey Paintings, Mediation pulses with restrained color—ochres and umbers bleeding into cooler tones—suggesting a landscape caught between memory and erasure.
Richter’s Photopaintings and the Crisis of Representation
The late 1960s marked Richter’s decisive break from both Socialist Realism (which he had practiced in East Germany) and the gestural abstraction of postwar European painting. His Photopaintings, including works like Mediation, emerged from this rupture. By transcribing photographs into paint only to partially obliterate them, Richter exposed the medium’s inability to deliver objective truth—a theme that resonated deeply in an era dominated by mass media and political propaganda.
Unlike American Photorealists who celebrated technical precision, Richter treated the photographic source as raw material for painterly interrogation. The Tate’s analysis emphasizes how his blurred technique mimics the way memory distorts experience over time. In Mediation, the horizontal bands of color might evoke a horizon line or architectural cornices, but their dissolution prevents definitive reading. This ambiguity became Richter’s hallmark, aligning him with conceptual artists while maintaining painting’s primacy.
Mediation embodies Richter’s paradox: a painting that remembers its photographic origins even as it erases them. The work’s power lies not in what it depicts but in how it forces us to confront the act of looking itself.
The Alchemy of Richter’s Brushwork
Layered Erasure
Richter built Mediation through a subtractive process, beginning with thin glazes of oil paint applied over a projected photograph. He then dragged dry brushes or squeegees across the wet surface to smear and blend the layers. The resulting streaks—some deliberate, others accidental—create a dynamic tension between the artist’s control and the medium’s resistance. In this print’s 30×40 cm format, the texture of these strokes becomes especially tangible, inviting close inspection of how color pools and separates.
Chromatic Ambiguity
The palette of muted ochres, umbers, and slate blues in Mediation avoids the high contrast of Richter’s earlier works. Instead, he employs near-monochromatic transitions where colors bleed into one another at the edges of forms. This technique, which The Art Story describes as “controlled chance,” allows the painting to oscillate between depth and flatness. The warm underlayers peek through cooler upper glazes, creating an illusion of luminosity that shifts with the viewer’s position.
Own This Masterful Study in Ambiguity
Bring Gerhard Richter’s Mediation into your space as a premium framed print. Each piece arrives ready to hang with archival inks on cotton-rag paper, encased in a contemporary gallery frame. Free worldwide shipping ensures your print arrives in 5–10 business days, wherever you are.
View Print DetailsWhere to Hang Mediation: A Curator’s Guide
The 30×40 cm dimensions of this Richter print make it ideally suited for intimate settings where its textural complexity can be appreciated up close. Consider positioning it in a study or reading nook with neutral-toned walls—soft grays, warm whites, or pale taupes—that allow the painting’s subtle chromatic shifts to dominate. Avoid busy patterns in adjacent decor; instead, pair it with minimalist furniture in natural woods or matte black to echo Richter’s balance of warmth and restraint.
For larger spaces, create a gallery wall with other abstract works, but give Mediation breathing room as the focal point. Its horizontal orientation works particularly well above a console table or low credenza, where the eye can trace the layered brushstrokes at standing height. In contemporary interiors, the print’s framed edges and muted palette bridge modern and mid-century aesthetics without competing with architectural details.
What kind of frame is included, and how is it constructed?
The print arrives in a contemporary gallery frame made from solid wood with a matte finish, designed to complement the artwork without overpowering it. The frame includes a protective acrylic glazing and acid-free mounting to ensure long-term preservation.
Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?
We offer free worldwide shipping to every country with no minimum purchase. Delivery typically takes 5–10 business days, depending on your location. All orders include end-to-end tracking.
How archival is the print, and will the colors fade over time?
Each print uses pigment-based inks on 300gsm cotton-rag paper, rated for 100+ years under normal lighting conditions. The inks are UV-resistant to prevent fading, and the frame includes UV-filtering acrylic for added protection.
What is your return policy if I’m not satisfied?
You may return your print within 30 days of delivery for a full refund, no questions asked. We cover return shipping costs and provide a prepaid label for convenience.
Sources & Further Reading
- MoMA. "Gerhard Richter: Painting After All." moma.org
- Tate. "Gerhard Richter: Panorama." tate.org.uk
- The Art Story. "Gerhard Richter: German Painter." theartstory.org
More Works by Gerhard Richter
Explore Richter’s evolving relationship with abstraction and photography through these key works from the same period.
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