From Valentine's Day 2012, interested guests of the renowned Restaurant Wissingers (http://www.wissingers.de/) on Lindau Island can not only indulge in culinary delights as usual but also enjoy visual pleasures. For the next three months, twenty complex and equally ambiguous Structuralist works will be exhibited in the large dining room.
Upon entering the dining room, you immediately feel it. The paintings seem to vibrate, and the atmosphere thus created has an additional positive effect on the culinary enjoyment.
Although each Structuralist painting is unique in itself, together they form a significant organism of currently more than 2000 works.
Most of them are represented under a single label. This is despite hundreds of artists of all ages, professions, and countries of origin already collaborating on it.
The special feature of this new technique, which can be easily learned by anyone who enjoys creative design, is not only its unified appearance under a common brand. It is also its tie to an indexed value. This means that the prices of the paintings are not arbitrarily defined but increase in value equally and consistently year after year.
On the one hand, Structuralist paintings cannot be traded speculatively in the short term in this way. On the other hand, their acquisition is always guaranteed, even for modest budgets, due to the low entry price. The artistic artifacts are therefore produced (consciously in the sense of a craft easily accessible to everyone) as tangible assets. And these can be easily traded anywhere. The corresponding market is therefore among ordinary people and not somewhere detached, only for wealthy contemporaries. And because Structuralist art is also open to everyone in terms of training, every Structuralist can not only be a producer but also a beneficiary of this revolutionary socio-economic movement at the same time.
This fulfills the demand of the founder of the philosophical concept of Structuralism, Felix Stoffel: 'By the people, for the people, and within the people.'
Further information: www.structuristicart.com
