Werner Szendi – Color, Light and Spiritual Perception Werner Szendi (born in Güssing, Austria) is a contemporary artist whose work merges color, light and spiritual perception into atmospheric fields of resonance. His paintings create visual spaces in which energetic structures, archetypal forms and meditative stillness blend into a clearly recognizable and personal artistic language. Szendi lives and works in Vienna, Kritzendorf and in an atelier in Texas (USA), which he used during several extended working periods. These international phases broadened his perspective and shaped the development of his color‑psychological, symbolic and energetic visual worlds. His works have been exhibited in Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas in more than ninety exhibitions and are represented in private and public collections. The combination of spiritual depth, sacred geometry and contemporary abstraction positions Szendi as a distinctive voice within current painting. ✦ Artist Statement Werner Szendi’s artistic practice explores the relationship between color, energy and consciousness. His painting understands color as frequency — activating emotional, spiritual and spatial dimensions simultaneously. Through precisely layered structures, axes of light and transparent color fields, he creates visual resonance spaces that oscillate between inner landscape, cosmic geometry and meditative stillness. A central element of his work is the use of symbols and sacred geometry. Spheres, lines, archetypal forms and energetic patterns function as markers of an expanded perceptual field. They reference universal structures that appear in nature, mythology and spiritual traditions alike. Many of his paintings open like portals: transitional zones between visible and invisible reality, between inner experience and outer space. These portals are not depictions but energetic thresholds — places where perception intensifies and consciousness expands. Szendi’s artistic development has been shaped by profound experiences of awareness and perception, deepening his sensitivity for light, symbolism and energetic structures. These experiences flow into his work not illustratively but structurally — in the way color fields pulse, geometric forms unfold and light appears as a carrier of information. His painting is less representation than energetic experience. It seeks to translate the invisible — silence, connection, healing, consciousness — into visual form. In doing so, Szendi’s work positions itself at the intersection of contemporary abstraction, spiritual image traditions and an expanded understanding of perception.