Silvia Willkens was born in 1953 in Bad Kreuznach, Germany. She studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart from 1971-1974 and later in the Arts Faculty of the Johannes Gutenberg University in Mainz, where she obtained her Master’s Degree in 1979.
Her works have been exhibited widely in Europe and North America and received great acclaim from critics and collectors alike. Apart from practicing painting, from 1988 to 1999, she lectured at different art institutes.
Willkens’s portraits resonate a quite realm of spirituality. Her portrayed figures resemble early Renaissance woman. Serene, silent, almost otherworldly, she pursues a pure kind and inner beauty that is timeless.
Willkens paints with great meticulousness and in the spirit of perfectionism, each piece of her works represents a long journey of artistic deliberation and refinement. It takes Kwai Fung Hin six years to find the opportunity to present her works again since her first exhibition at Kwai Fung Hin in 2005. At the coming exhibition, there will be showed about 15 pieces of her most fantastic works executed in the last few years.
Willkens has long been inspired by the portraits of women from early Renaissance, in particular, the soulful figures of Giotto as well as works by Flemish masters. Willkens’s portrayed women have a subtle smile, with their hairs pulled tightly off forehead with various hair accessories. Such reveal the social upbringing in Medieval Europe in which women are supposed to have hair up with stylized expression, meaning proper, elegant and righteousness of a woman. Willkens’s almost saint-like portrayed ladies, with their calm gazes, long and delicate facial features, and pale like porcelain complexions, all reflect the beauty criteria of women that are rooted in ancient Greek culture and extended to Medieval Europe. As she notes, "I have always been in love with early Renaissance painting. The portraits are spiritual, pure and innocent, almost Goddess or saint-like, and after hundreds of years, still manage to touch the hearts of people."
Her images of human beings seem to derive from a different frame of time. Faces, as well as whole figures, often without any specific attribute and without a particular statement of space, are composed with plain sensitive colour panels. Willkens would like to call these paintings “Collective Portraits”. To her, the outcome of her images is “a melted view of different persons from different times and different cultures as they are handed down to us through the arts.“ Her search also includes the observation of contemporary people.
In this way she creates some sort of amalgam of human images, that is always slightly reminiscent of somebody, of somewhere, maybe also of some feeling of being fresh, unspent and peaceful.