Karl Eulenstein's work is dominated by motifs of the seaside, the nature of the coastal area, images of his native Klaipėda, and the everyday life of fishermen. Dr. Jörn Barfod, an expert on East Prussian artistic heritage and curator of the joint exhibition, writes: "Karl Eulenstein has managed to find a new and independent pictorial language for the depiction of his own Klaipėda region, old motifs. The bright blues, reds, yellows, and sometimes soft greens or light greys are fascinating, but the darkness and heaviness that is a haunting feature of Eulenstein's pre-war work always remains. The black of the simpler but strong outlines sometimes appears almost flat and dominant. It is clear that the artist was influenced by the work of Emile Nolde and Georges Rouault. However, it is not possible to attribute his work entirely to one or the other. The terms "Expressionism" or "Late Expressionism" can thus be applied to his work in a distinctive, i.e. "Eulensteinian" way. In Pranas Domšaitis Gallery (Liepų g. 33, Klaipėda)