10/04/2026
Come and see T I T U S B R E I N photographyart at G A L E R I E A N N É E Haarlem. WELCOME The work of Titus Michaël Brein (1966) operates at the intersection of photography and painting. He developed a visual language in which stillness, process, layering, and temporality take center stage. Brein draws inspiration from, among other sources, the visual tradition of the 17th and 19th centuries—landscapes, still lifes, vanitas, and the human body—but translates these themes into a contemporary, serene, and sometimes abstract visual language. In his work, a subtle tension arises between the ephemeral and the enduring, between presence and absence. His images appear to exist in an intermediate zone: neither fully photographic nor purely painterly. Characteristic is his use of self-developed techniques and filters, oil-pigmented and white prints, in which he enriches his photographic images with painterly textures and an almost tangible rendering of materials. This approach creates a visual depth reminiscent of the tradition of Dutch, Italian, and Spanish masters, without falling into nostalgia. His work invites stillness and contemplation, and reveals itself slowly – like an image that appears for a moment, only to disappear again.