Art-Management, a Luxembourg art consulting company, has announced that it is hosting a painting exhibition titled “Extraterrestrial Landscapes” by Marc Graas at Da Vinci Forum in Luxembourg-Ville until Saturday 28 February 2026.
On Wednesday 18 February at 18:00, the exhibition will hold a “vernissage”, where the artist himself will officially open the exhibition, which is already running since Thursday 5 February 2026.
The event programme will include a cocktail, music and a guided tour with the curator.
According to Art-Management, Marc Graas uses his paintings to invite the audience for reflection on how matter, structure and life might interact beyond human expectations.
Art-Management interpreted “Extraterrestrial Landscapes” as artists imagined environments that feel simultaneously architectural, biological and archaeological. According to the art consulting company, these works depict evolving habitats shaped by unknown forces, unfamiliar materials and the remnants of earlier existences rather than recognisable planets.
The paintings showcase structures that resemble abstract cities, shelters, towers or mechanical fragments, which appear assembled from the residues of past civilisations, fragments of spacecraft and organic matter, noted Art-Management.
“For viewers engaged with design and the built environment, the paintings suggest structures without permanence and systems without predictable rules, where adaptation replaces control and precision,” said Art-Management.
About the artist
Born in Luxembourg in 1963, Marc Graas studied medicine in Innsbruck, Austria. After working in hospitals in Luxembourg, Austria and Germany, he started practising as a psychiatrist and psychotherapist in his own city-based practice.
His artworks have recently been exhibited in Austria, Germany and Italy, as well as at several locations in Luxembourg, including the Valentiny Foundation in Remerschen.
Before developing his passion for painting, Marc Graas was interested in literary expression. He has published five novels in German.
“I would like my paintings to resemble the flight of a butterfly; I would like my paintings to make people happy,” he said.