Alfred Neumayr (1958 - 2021): Unnamed World: Gallery Two • In-Person and Online

ON VIEW: JANUARY 15 - MARCH 7, 2026

OPENING RECEPTION: THURSDAY, JANUARY 15, 6 - 8 PM

 

Alfred Neumayr devoted himself to what he called “drawing nothingness,” an origin state he imagined as capable of becoming anything—a simple object, a mythic figure, or an entire universe—without ever collapsing into mere emptiness. A trained offset printer from Tulln, Lower Austria, he turned to art only after a burnout in 2005, eventually finding a daily working rhythm in Gugging’s open studio from 2011, where drawing became both occupation and quiet insistence.

Working primarily with India ink and pencil on cardboard, canvas, and paper, Neumayr would begin at an arbitrary point and let the line wander until forms surfaced from a thicket of strokes. Over time, he developed a distinctive vocabulary of fine marks, varied pen pressures, and physical interventions—scratching, pricking, thinning—that made each surface feel both drawn and lightly carved.

From a distance, these works suggest abstract, monochrome fields; up close, they resolve into aerial terrains, cosmic drift, and hybrid beings bearing suggestive titles like “Circe,” “Totem,” “Eve and Adam,” and the “Eronauts.” Shown at Galerie Gugging, Ricco/Maresca in New York, Drawing Now Paris, and in collections such as the Collection de l’Art Brut in Lausanne, Neumayr’s drawings never settle into a single reading. They stage, instead, the moment when something first begins to take shape—a world emerging, line by line, from a charged and nameless before.

 

Artist photograph courtesy of galerie gugging.