For the fine arts connoisseur, Asia lover and Christian Brechneff - fan (to be),


a like-new, beautiful, deluxe 1st US edition / 1st printing copy of



Christian Peltenburg-Brechneff
Homage. Encounters with The East
Preface by H.H Gaj Singh II, Maharaja of Marwar-Jodphur
Foreword by Donald Kuspit
Glitterati Incorporated, New York / US, 2007


Your copy comes with a signed and numbered print (numbers 164 or 283 of 350).
Both copies are like new with minor wear to the clamshell box corners only (see photos; additional photos on request).


"In the age of mechanical reproduction, many fail to appreciate intricate drawings made by hand, hands having become mere obsolete instruments these days, compared to the fast precision of the digital camera. Christian Peltenburg-Brechneff's drawings capture what the camera can never capture: the spirit of the places he has rendered. Brechneff takes on the challenge of exploring and translating the architectural and spiritual wonders of the "lost" kingdoms of the Himalayans with brush and ink and color washes: Laddakh, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, India, Burma, Cambodia and Laos. Brought to life through imaginative investment, Brechneff's subjects become more mysterious, and preciously exciting than ever. They sparkle with subjective life and become rapturously alive in a way that a photograph could never be.

The ancient architecture of India - many old palaces and temples - and ageless mountains are already inspired creations, with archetypal import, emphasizing that Brechneffs's journey to them is a spiritual journey. The intricate drawings form a visual diary of his travels. Each drawing is dated, and the place depicted named, indicating that the drawing is a documentary as well as personal journal. Peltenburg-Brechneff decodes and maps India's architecture and mountains with the hope of grasping the secret of their creative dynamic, rather than only preserving their dramatic appearance for posterity. Homage is a breathtakingly beautiful spiritual quest." (homageencounterswiththeeast.com)


"Christian Brechneffs new pastels, drawn in various locations around the world, indicate a remarkably direct, close relationship-rather startling intimacy and engagement-with nature, even more intense, I venture to say, than that of the Impressionists. These 19th century artists retained a certain "scientific" distance and detachment-they wanted to observe the details of atmosphere and light, not immerse themselves in the totality of nature-that Brechneff altogether abandons, without abandoning any of his artistic ability and awareness, indeed, the acumen of his hand. He is a kind of Jacob wrestling with the angel of light, with his art receiving its blessing. His pastels are mystical epiphanies that nonetheless remain adroitly focused-a romantic art that carefully details the titanic forces at work in sacred nature. There is in fact a strong sense of the limitless-the rupture of the unbounded-in Brechneffs oceanic pastels. One can feel it in every detail, as it loses its boundaries in the process of fusing-in a kind of magmatic fury-with other details, to form an amorphous infinity. Brechneff pictures what has been called "nonindifferent nature"-a nature into which we project our own emotions-but it is also a nature that reminds us of our irrelevance in the larger scheme of the cosmos. Born in the former Belgian Congo in 1950, Christian Peltenburg-Brechneff was educated in Switzerland, England and the United States of America. In 1975 he received his Master of Art Degree from the Royal College of Art in London. He has exhibited in Europe and the United States of America, and has won numerous awards, including the Swiss Federal Government Scholarship. "Three Oceans", his last one man show in New York in 2001, was with Salander-O'Reilly Galleries. His paintings appear in public and private collections worldwide including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Greece, and the Orange County Museum, Newport Beach, California." (christianbrechneff.com)