Room of Wonder brings together the works of Johann Alexis and Enrico Bach in a dialogue of form, color and perception. Both artists push painting beyond representation, offering immersive fields where rhythm, structure and emotion converge. The exhibition invites viewers to step into a space of contemplation and discovery, where abstraction becomes a language of wonder and possibility.
Room of Wonder unfolds as a meeting point between two distinct yet complementary artistic voices: Johann Alexis and Enrico Bach. Both artists, in their own ways, stretch the limits of abstraction, creating works that are less about depiction and more about evocation — spaces where perception shifts and emotions surface.
Johann Alexis approaches painting as a living field of intensity. His canvases, whether immersed in deep blues, vibrant greens, or sharp reds, pulse with a physical presence that draws the viewer inward. In works such as Damocles Dawn or In My Garden, Alexis moves between tension and release, layering forms and colors that suggest both fragility and strength. His practice embraces accident and gesture, allowing the canvas to breathe, to resist, and to reveal. Alexis’s paintings are less objects than experiences: they hold the gaze, vibrate with energy, and create openings into an almost musical sense of rhythm.
In contrast, Enrico Bach builds his compositions on the foundation of structure and balance. His paintings are meticulous constructions, often playing with overlapping planes, shifting perspectives, and subtle tonal contrasts. Works like B.N.S. and S.G.G. articulate spaces that are at once precise and enigmatic. Bach’s geometries are not rigid; they contain slippages, slight misalignments, and nuanced color transitions that destabilize the eye. Through these layered constructions, he invites viewers into a spatial dialogue — a meditation on order, disruption, and the poetics of form.
Placed together in Room of Wonder, the works of Alexis and Bach create a powerful resonance. Alexis opens painting to movement and raw emotion, while Bach grounds it in structure and contemplative depth. Between them, a spectrum emerges: one artist leaning into intensity, the other into precision; one gestural, the other architectural. Yet what unites them is a shared commitment to painting as a language that exceeds words — a space where viewers can project their own feelings, memories, and questions.
Ultimately, Room of Wonder is not simply an exhibition, but an invitation. It asks us to pause, to enter into dialogue with color and form, and to discover how abstraction can expand our ways of seeing and feeling. In the meeting of Johann Alexis and Enrico Bach, wonder becomes not an escape from reality, but a deeper way of engaging with it.