Showing posts with label expressionism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label expressionism. Show all posts

22/10/24

Gabriele Münter Retrospective @ Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid - "Gabriele Münter. The Great Expressionist Woman Painter" Exhibition

Gabriele Münter
The Great Expressionist Woman Painter
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, Madrid
12 November 2024 - 9 February 2025

Gabriele Münter Painting at the Easel in Open Air
Kochel, July 18, 1902
Photograph of Wassily Kandinsky
The Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation, Munich

Gabriele Münter (1877-1962) was one of the founders of The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter), the legendary group of Expressionist artists based in Munich which emerged in late 1911, to which Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc, among others, also belonged. Gabriele Münter is well known as an artist in Germany but it is only in recent years that she has started to enjoy greater recognition in the rest of Europe. The Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, which has four of her paintings in its collections, is now organising the first retrospective on the artist in Spain, thus continuing its project of researching and highlighting the work of so many great women artists and the place they deserve in the history of art.

Through 145 paintings, drawings, prints and photographs the exhibition aims to present not only Gabriele Münter’s artistic activities and the rich complexity of her work, but also an artist who rebelled against the limitations imposed on women of her day and who became one of the outstanding figures of German Expressionism at the start of the 20th century. Throughout her extensive career, on numerous occasions Gabrielle Münter demonstrated an ability to adapt, a tireless desire for experimentation and an openness to what was new or different. In her paintings, with their precise lines and intense colours, she immerses the viewer in her private world and through her highly perceptive gaze presents lovers, everyday objects, landscapes and herself, all refined to their essence.

The exhibition is the result of a collaborative project between the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza, the Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation and the Städtische Galerie am Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau in Munich. It benefits from the support of the Comunidad de Madrid and the Art Foundation Mentor Lucerne. 

After its showing in Madrid the exhibition will be seen at the Musée d'Art Moderne in Paris from 4 April through 24 August 2025.

The exhibition opens with a section in which the artist presents herself to the public through a series of self-portraits and photographs, then continues along a thematic-chronological route which covers Münter’s entire, lengthy career. An extensive initial chapter is devoted to her beginnings as an amateur photographer, analysing how her relationship with this modern mode of expression, less codified than traditional fine arts, was fundamental for her later development. Her activity as a painter is then presented through a journey that starts with the works created on her travels around Europe and North Africa with her partner Wassily Kandinsky, and continues in a large space dedicated to her masterpieces from the Blue Rider period. Finally, the exhibition focuses on Münter’s exile in Scandinavia during World War I and the different paths of expression she encountered following her return to Germany in the 1920s. 

Gabriele Münter: Reflections and shadows

The first room of the exhibition is devoted to the self-portraits which Münter created throughout her career, but particularly between 1908 and 1914, the years when she was one of the key figures in the rise of Expressionism in Munich. Also included are a number of photographs in which the shadow of the artist appears projected in the image, a resource that functioned to include her figure in the composition and which she sometimes employed in her paintings, as in Boating (1910) and Breakfast of the Birds (1934), in both of which the painter is represented from behind in the foreground.

Gabriele Münter: Begginings in black and white

Between 1898 and 1900 Gabriele Münter visited the United States, a country where her parents, emigrants who had returned to Germany during the Civil War, had met and married and which she was now visiting for the first time. During those two years she lived with her maternal relatives in various places, becoming familiar with the reality of American society at first hand and recording everything that caught her attention in her sketchbooks. After being gifted one of the new Kodak portable cameras in 1899, photography made a decisive contribution to Gabriele Münter’s activities as a draughtsman and she experimented with the creative possibilities of the new medium. 

The exhibition brings together a selection of 20 photographs of the more than 400 which Gabriele Münter took during tat decisive trip, images highly valued both for their artistic quality and their importance for her creative development. For the first time in these photographs she explores themes such as landscape, urban views, domestic interiors and the world of work, which would later become the subjects of her paintings. Her interest in capturing moments and the concept of working in series are other aspects that would subsequently emerge in her paintings, as well as her simple and analytical way of looking, capable of structuring space through a few lines, which is one of the principal characteristics of her pictorial compositions.

Gabriele Münter: Outdoors

After her return to Germany in 1901 Münter embarked on her artistic training in Munich. The following year this would take her to the Phalanx art school of which Kandinsky was a founder and teacher. Its painting classes proved crucial for Münter’s decision to opt for painting rather than sculpture, which had initially attracted her. Between 1902 and 1903 she took part in the painting trips organised by Kandinsky in rural areas of Bavaria where she produced her first oil paintings. Subsequently, between 1904 and 1908, the two travelled around Europe and North Africa together and moved to Paris for a year, where they had the opportunity to see the work of Gauguin, Van Gogh and the Fauves, led by Matisse. During these trips Münter pursued her interest in photography and painted outdoors, often recording the same image with her camera and brushes. These paintings are stylistically linked to late Impressionism, revealing a greater interest in volume than in the study of atmospheric effects.

Gabriele Münter: The discovery of Murnau

After returning to Munich in the summer of 1908 Münter visited the Bavarian town of Murnau in the foothills of the Alps, again with Kandinsky and in the company of the artists and couple Alexej von Jawlensky and Marianne von Werefkin. Their close collaboration resulted in works considered foundational for South German Expressionism: “It was a wonderful, interesting and happy creative time in which we argued a lot about art.” Münter's paintings reveal the transition from her previous approach, with its short, heavily charged brushstrokes, to a new fluid style, expressed in compositions in which she progressively eliminated the anecdotal and gave free rein to colour. The following year she and her fellow artists returned to the town and acquired a house on the outskirts which would become her refuge and the epicentre of the early 20th-century, German artistic avant-garde.

Gabriele Münter: People

“Painting portraits is the most daring and difficult, the most spiritual, the most extreme endeavour for an artist.” Gabriele Münter was particularly interested in the depiction of people, as evident in her sketchbooks and photographs, with a clear preference for women and children. In these works she reveals a skill in combining a reduction of compositional elements with a fidelity to the physical resemblance of the person portrayed. Following the stylistic change that took place in her work in Murnau, her portraits employ more intense colours, simplified shapes and darker outlines. Above all, Gabriele Münter painted people from her immediate surroundings, initially locating them against a plain background then later moving towards compositions in which the figures are integrated into genre scenes, located in interiors or in a dialogue with the objects around them.

Gabriele Münter: Interiors and objects

Between 1909 and the outbreak of World War I, Gabriele Münter alternated winters in Munich with long periods at her home in Murnau, which became the subject of some of her paintings and photographs. The utopian ideal she shared with Kandinsky of creating an artistic community linked to the rural world and connected with nature led them to renounce the comforts of the big city and lead a simple life, dressing in typical peasant costume and working on their vegetable patch. Gabriele Münter discovered the painting on glass typical of the area, a type of folk art with simplified forms and expressive colours divided by thick, dark outlines, which fascinated her as it involved many of the elements she aspired to achieve in her painting. She acquired a number of pieces of this type which she used to decorate her home, as seen in her paintings and photographs. They became key motifs in her still lifes, in which she sought to connect with the spirituality of these primarily devotional objects. She also learned the technique herself and was the first of the group to produce her own works on glass.

Gabriele Münter: The blue horsewoman

From 1909 Gabriele Münter actively participated in the New Association of Artists in Munich, in the exhibitions of The Blue Rider group from late 1911 and in the publication of its almanac of the same name. The photographs she took at this time demonstrate her role in the group, as well as her sophisticated understanding of the importance of visually recording these events. Like the rest of her companions, Münter aspired to achieve a form of expression that responded to what Kandinsky defined as “inner need”; a genuinely individual form of expression that led each of them to develop a different style even though they shared common sources of inspiration. Like all these artists, Münter was interested in European folk culture and the art of other continents: she collected children's drawings and copied some of them in a process of “unlearning” which she considered fundamental to her artistic evolution, and although she was an essentially figurative painter, on occasions she came close to abstraction.

Gabriele Münter: Exile in Scandinavia

Following the outbreak of World War I Münter settled in neutral Sweden in July 1915, remaining there until 1920. She encountered the local art scene, which welcomed her as an important representative of the international avant-garde. The decorative Expressionism of these painters, influenced by their master Matisse, soon left its mark on some of her works, resulting in a more graphic style and softened colours. Münter travelled round Sweden and Norway in search of new pictorial motifs to replace her much-missed Murnau, producing landscapes with a greater emphasis on narrative and including small figures. Financial necessity led her to execute numerous commissioned portraits during these years, but she also painted a series of symbolic portraits representing different states of mind, works that reveal a renewed interest in human beings, particularly women.

Gabriele Münter: A nomadic life

When Gabriele Münter returned to Germany in 1920 her close circle of artists had disappeared, including Kandinsky who had returned to Russia during the war and embarked on a new relationship there. With no fixed address, during those years Gabriele Münter focused on her activity as a graphic artist and on portraying the free and emancipated women with whom she socialised. “It was years before I had a studio. The sketchbook was my friend and the drawings the reflection of what I saw with my eyes […]. The result was mere sketches, works of the moment, sketches in a couple of strokes […]. They contained everything I had to say.” After living in various places, in 1925 she moved to Berlin, where she renewed her contacts with the German art world and attended Arthur Segal’s art school. A number of her works from the 1920s are stylistically linked to New Objectivity in their aim of reducing the chromatic range and making any trace of the brushstrokes disappear, although Gabriele Münter never shifted her focus to the social critique associated with some of the artists of that movement. 

Gabriele Münter: Return to Murnau

After a fruitful period in Paris between October 1929 and June 1930 Gabriele Münter’s itinerant life came to an end in 1931 when she permanently moved into her house in Murnau. The streets and surrounding landscapes once again became the principal themes and motifs of many of her works, paintings in which she frequently revived her own Expressionist tradition. During the years of the Third Reich Münter continued to live in Murnau, progressively reducing her public presence. The end of World War II led to a progressive rediscovery of her art and her reputation started to grow through numerous exhibitions and acquisitions of her work by museums and collectors. Gabriele Münter continued to work in the last years of her life. Some of her final paintings were versions of previous works in which she reflected on her life and artistic career.

On the occasion of her 80th birthday in 1957 Gabriele Münter made a large donation to the Lenbachhaus of works by her own hand and by other members of The Blue Rider group which she had kept hidden in her house during the Nazi period. The result was to transform the Lenbachhaus into the key museum for that artistic movement.

Publications: Catalogue with texts by Marta Ruiz del Árbol, Anna Storm and Isabelle Jansen. Educational guide and audio guide (Spanish and English). Gabriele Münter. Las tierras azules, comic by Mayte Alvarado, co-published with Astiberri.

Curators: Marta Ruiz del Árbol, curator of Modern Painting at the Museo Nacional Thyssen-Bornemisza; Isabelle Jansen, director of the Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation, and Mattias Mühling, president of the Gabriele Münter and Johannes Eichner Foundation and director of the Städtische Galerie am Lenbachhaus und Kunstbau München, Munich.

MUSEO NACIONAL THYSSEN-BORNEMISZA
Paseo del Prado, 8. 28014, Madrid

14/04/24

Artist Henry Wuorila-Stenberg Exhibition @ Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki

Henry Wuorila-Stenberg 
Galerie Forsblom, Helsinki  
April 26 – June 2, 2024 

Henry Wuorila-Stenberg’s paintings emanate from a silent void – a void that is never static but instead keeps evolving in its nuances and cadences. For Wuorila-Stenberg, painting is a form of meditation and a quest for peace. Meditation has played a very important role in the artist’s life for over forty years, and so it is only natural that his creative process flows from a similar all-encompassing, meditative state of emptying one’s mind. His paintings' psychological and spiritual content seems to transcend what can be expressed in words. It is important for Henry Wuorila-Stenberg that each painting has a fundamentally ineffable core. How can something for which there are no words be verbalized? Language fails as we confront a pristine rush of emotions that shakes us to our core.

Henry Wuorila-Stenberg’s expressionistic style is influenced by the years he spent studying art in West Berlin during the 1970s. His expressionism finds a counterpart in his paintings' equally striking surrealist elements. Themes and events related to the artist’s own life are his primary source of inspiration, and his chosen colors are also linked to personal experiences. The artist in fact describes his relationship with color as an intensely psychological one. His raw choreographies of color impart their very own narratives, and their evocative textures endow color with a powerful material presence in his paintings.

Henry Wuorila-Stenberg’s process is totally intuitive: when he picks up the paintbrush, he has no idea where the journey will lead. The crucial thing is that he achieves a state of flow, and the stages and traces of the process must be visible on the canvas. Thumbing his nose at convention, Henry Wuorila-Stenberg has always regarded painting as a vehicle of self-expression and identity-building. He describes painting as having grown easier with age; in his youth, he felt a greater need to define his place within the context of art history, but these days, he allows the process to flow freely, unfettered by labels and definitions.

Henry Wuorila-Stenberg (b. 1949) ranks among Finland’s most acclaimed painters. This year marks his 50th artist anniversary. Henry Wuorila-Stenberg has received numerous accolades, including the Pro Finlandia medal in 2004 and the Finland Award in 1996. His work is represented in the collections of the Gothenburg Museum of Art, EMMA Espoo Museum of Modern Art, HAM Helsinki Art Museum, the Wäinö Aaltonen Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma. He has held solo exhibitions at venues including the Wäinö Aaltonen Museum, HAM Helsinki Art Museum, Hyvinkää Art Museum and Oulu Art Museum.

GALERIE FORSBLOM
Yrjönkatu 22 - 00120 Helsinki

22/12/21

James Ensor @ Gladstone Gallery, NYC - An Intimate Portrait - Exhibition + Catalogue

James Ensor. An Intimate Portrait 
Gladstone Gallery, New York 
Through January 15, 2022 

Gladstone Gallery presents an exhibition of historic works by Belgian artist James Ensor, a monumental figure in the late 19th-century Belgian avant-garde and a singular influence in the development of Expressionism. Curated by Sabine Taevernier, this show brings together paintings, drawings, and etchings, made between 1888 and 1896, alongside one of the most prolific and significant periods of creation during James Ensor’s lifetime. Spanning a diverse collection of subjects and figures, the works in this exhibition demonstrate the artist’s perceptive eye in capturing both his internal strife and the external variables that impacted him and the artists, friends, and family he was surrounded by.

Born in 1860 in the seaside town of Ostend, Belgium, James Ensor would spend time between his hometown and Brussels, which offered him a diversity of experiences and friendships with significant figures who deeply influenced Ensor throughout his lifetime. He had a challenging childhood in Ostend with his merchant parents, as he and family members dealt with depression, anxiety, and alcoholism that eventually led to his father’s death and caused great internal strife for the artist. His main refuge was his attic studio, where James Ensor surrounded himself with his paintings, drawings, and collection of found masks that inspired his realistic and imaginary narratives. In Brussels, where James Ensor spent most of his winters, he found companionship with the Rousseau family, who housed him during his excursions away from the beachfront. Comprised of academics, artists, and doctors, the Rousseau family would discuss science and politics, but also music, literature, and visual art, opening him up to a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives and multifaceted modes of thinking. Primarily perceived as a reclusive thinker and worker, James Ensor’s interpersonal relationships were essential forms of communication and understanding of the political, cultural, and fantastical world around him that greatly influenced the nature of and approach to his practice.

A comprehensive exhibition catalogue published by the gallery with essays by Susan M. Canning, Sabine Taevernier, Herwig Todts, and Xavier Tricot accompanies the show, and includes a series of essays that further explore the themes presented in this presentation.

James Ensor
JAMES ENSOR
Published by Gladstone Gallery on the occasion of the exhibition James Ensor. An Intimate Portrait, Curated by Sabine Taevernier, at Gladstone Gallery, 130 East 64th Street, New York, November 2021 - January 2022
GLADSTONE GALLERY
130 East 64th Street, New York, NY 10065

18/09/21

Brian Maguire @ Crawford Art Gallery, Cork - Remains

Brian Maguire: Remains
Crawford Art Gallery, Cork
17 September 2021 - 9 January 2022

Brian Maguire
BRIAN MAGUIRE
Arizona 2, 2020
Acrylic on linen, 150 x 200 cm
Photo courtesy of Kerlin Gallery, Dublin
© Brian Maguire

Crawford Art Gallery presents Remains, a series of large scale artworks by BRIAN MAGUIRE. The exhibition depicts the lives lost crossing the border to the US.

Artist Brian Maguire, known for his expressionist paintings addressing issues of social injustice, continues his creative enquiry into the Mexican/American border. In 2019, Brian Maguire visited Dr Greg Hess, Chief Medical Examiner for Pima County, Tucson, Arizona. Dr Hess gave the artist access to some thousand visual records of migrant lives lost in the crossing from South and Central America and Mexico, into the United States. Having combed through these records, Brian Maguire began a new series of paintings, acknowledging the many unidentified victims who undertook this perilous journey to the United States.
Curator Anne Boddaert says ‘When Brian shared his work with us, here in the Crawford Art Gallery, we were upended, we looked and simply could not look away. His works compels the audience to linger on issues of migration and global unrest‘. Anne Boddaert went on to say “Despite the challenging subject matter, visitors will be drawn to Brian’s expressionist style beautifully executed in these expansive paintings. This exhibition will showcase the artist’s poised technique and how he utilises open and rough brushstrokes to represent the harsh landscape of South and Central America and Mexico’ .
In late 2020, the Crawford Art Gallery secured the painting Arizona 3 for the national collection. This acquisition opened up a conversation with Brian Maguire about a showing of this emerging body of work, some of his most nuanced and ambitious to date. 

Brian Maguire
Brian Maguire
Remains
Exhibition Catalogue
A catalogue with full colour illustrations and texts by Dr Greg Hess, Christian Viveros-Fauné and Edward Vulliamy accompanies the exhibition.
BRIAN MAGUIRE
Irish painter Brian Maguire studied at Dun Laoghaire School of Art and the National College of Art and Design. He has worked with marginalised groups in institutions in Ireland, Poland and the US. Maguire represented Ireland at the São Paolo Biennale in 1998. He was appointed Professor of the Fine Art Faculty of the National College of Art and Design in 2000 and is an elected member of Aosdána. Brian Maguire has shown extensively in Europe and the US, most recently at the Museo De Arte de Ciudad Juarez, Mexico and the Rubin Centre, Texas University at El Paso, Texas (September 2019), at the United Nations Headquarters, New York, (in 2020), the Rhona Hoffmann Gallery, Chicago, (January 2021), and Galerie Christophe Gaillard, Paris (March 2021).

CRAWFORD ART GALLERY
Emmet Place, Cork, Ireland

03/01/19

Fritz Ascher @ Grey Art Gallery, New York University

Fritz Ascher: Expressionist 
Grey Art Gallery, New York University
January 9 - April 6, 2019

Fritz Ascher
Female Nude, 1916
White gouache over graphite,
watercolor, and black ink on paper
17 3/8 x 12 1/4 in.
Private collection
Photo: Malcolm Varon. © Bianca Stock

Fritz Ascher: Expressionist is the first-ever retrospective of an overlooked but significant German artist. Characterized by the Nazis as “degenerate” (along with other artists who were banned and persecuted), Fritz Ascher (1893–1970) survived two world wars, and then remained in Berlin where he lived and worked. In addition to painting and drawing, he turned to writing poetry later in life. Organized by the Fritz Ascher Society for Persecuted, Ostracized and Banned Art, Inc., the exhibition comprises some 75 paintings and works on paper, ranging from early academic studies and figural compositions to the artist’s late colorful, mystical landscapes devoid of human presence. 

Fritz Ascher developed his bold and colorful Expressionist style early in the 20th century. Taken under the wing of the prominent painter Max Liebermann, Fritz Ascher studied at the Königsberg Art Academy, and then in Berlin with the artist Lovis Corinth. In 1914 he travelled to Oslo, where he met Edvard Munch. During a prolonged stay in Munich, he associated with the artists who contributed to Simplicissimus magazine, including George Grosz and Käthe Kollwitz. Back in Berlin, he fell in with the artists of Die Brücke. Rachel Stern, curator of the show and director of the Fritz Ascher Society, observes: “Ascher belongs to a large group of prolific artists who were silenced by the Nazi terror regime, unable to work, exhibit, or sell their art. This exhibition explores the situation of a German Jewish artist working in the face of political oppression.” Lynn Gumpert, the Grey’s director, adds: “Fritz Ascher: Expressionist fits our mission to bring to light artists whose works have not received the exposure they deserve. By situating Fritz Ascher’s art within historical, social, and cultural contexts, we can examine how one artist responded to conditions of political tyranny and extreme duress, a situation that, alas, is all too relevant today.”

Fritz Ascher
Fritz Ascher
Untergehende Sonne (Sunset), c. 1960
Oil on canvas, 49 1/4 x 50 in.
Private collection
Photo: Malcolm Varon. © Bianca Stock

Fritz Ascher belongs to Germany’s “Lost Generation”—artists whose careers were interrupted or destroyed by the Nazi regime, and whose work has largely been underrecognized. Born in Berlin in 1893, to assimilated Jewish parents, Fritz Ascher showed interest in art at a young age and enjoyed early success. Supported by Liebermann, Fritz Ascher entered the Königsberg Art Academy in 1909, at the age of 16. By 1913 Ascher was back in Berlin, where he mingled with artists such as Ludwig Meidner, Emil Nolde, and Jakob Steinhardt, along with Max Beckmann, while developing his own Expressionist pictorial language. The exhibition, which is installed chronologically, begins with some of Fritz Ascher’s black-and-white drawings from this early period, which demonstrate his virtuosic approach. These sketches often feature a dominant, linear central human figure in the foreground while the background dissolves into abstraction. After Fritz Ascher traveled to Norway with his friend and fellow painter Franz Domscheit and met Munch, he set off for a prolonged stay in Bavaria where he met the contributors to the weekly magazine Simplicissimus, who included George Grosz, Käthe Kollwitz, Alfred Kubin, and Gustav Meyrink. Back in Berlin, Ascher befriended members of the Die Brücke (The Bridge) artists’ group.

With the onset of World War I, Expressionist artists embraced religious themes, and Fritz Ascher followed suit. Many of his works from this time convey an emphatic religiosity along with an interest in old sagas and myths. Ascher sketched many scenes of Christ’s passion as well as contemporary street fights. Another favorite motif was the golem, a creature from Jewish folklore that is magically animated from clay or mud. Usually brought to life by a rabbi who intends to control the anthropomorphized being, the golem could be used to protect Jews from persecution—or it could fly out of kilter, with tragic consequences. Ascher also frequently depicted Bajazzo (Clown), first inspired by the jealous title character in the opera Pagliacci by composer Ruggero Leoncavallo—while his later clowns are increasingly anxious, shown in isolation from the society around them. Into the 1920s, Fritz Ascher painted nightmarish visions of damnation, infernal torture, and writhing bodies, using jarring colors to render such well-known religious subjects as the Temptation of St. Anthony.

In 1933, Hitler assumed power. Though Fritz Ascher had been baptized as a Protestant, the Nazi regime classified him as a Jewish modern painter with a liberal political stance. Thus targeted as a dissident, he could no longer produce, exhibit, or sell his art. Soon he was forced into hiding, constantly moving from house to house. In November 1938, during “Kristallnacht” (Night of Broken Glass), Ascher was one of nearly 3,000 Jewish men who were arrested and deported to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp. After internment there and incarceration in Potsdam prison, Ascher lived “free” for several years, but was required to report every week to both the local police station and the Gestapo. In 1942, he was warned about the mass deportations of Berlin Jews and went into hiding in the Grunewald neighborhood. Unable to paint or draw, he turned to writing poetry. Until war’s end in 1945, he composed numerous poems, many of which are steeped in visions of love and divinity, evoking nature as a place of refuge and a spiritual home. Many of Ascher’s artworks, which he left with friends during the war, were destroyed in Allied bombings.

After Hitler’s defeat, Fritz Ascher continued to live in Berlin with his mother’s friend Martha Grassmann, across the street from his former hiding place. He immediately returned to making visual art, while remaining largely withdrawn from society. Initially, he repainted some of his existing works with colorful dots and streaks in an expressive version of pointillism. Turning away from his figurative compositions of the Weimar era, he then painted vibrant and richly textured landscapes inspired by the nearby forest of Grunewald. His bold forest scenes depict weathered oak and pine trees as symbols of resilience and hope. Other works from this period represent meadows, sunrises, and sunsets. His expressionist impulse reappeared in bright colors and intense brushstrokes. Close viewing reveals lush concentrations of color juxtaposed with raw canvas and unbridled splashes of paint. Thick impastoed areas are juxtaposed with thin liquid washes. Fritz Ascher’s powerful images of sun, trees, and flowers celebrate survival and the continuity of nature.

During his lifetime, Fritz Ascher enjoyed only one large retrospective exhibition, which opened at Berlin’s legendary Rudolf Springer Gallery in 1969, a few months before his death. Like most of his early works, very little exhibition documentation and other archival materials survive. Much of the biographical information presented in the exhibition and publication was gleaned from Berlin’s Reparation Files at the State Office for Civic and Regulatory Affairs and the Centrum Judaicum. Nearly all the works on view are lent by private collectors in Germany, the U.S., and Canada. Thus Fritz Ascher: Expressionist helps fill the gaps in German art history, a task begun with the inaugural documenta in Kassel in 1955, which acknowledged the first generation of modern artists deemed “degenerate.” Not until 1989, however, with the fall of the Berlin Wall and reunification of Germany, did heightened interest trigger more extensive research into less-well-known artists such as Fritz Ascher. 

NYU’s Grey Art Gallery is the first American museum to exhibit his work, following highly acclaimed presentations in Germany at Felix-Nussbaum-Haus in Osnabrück (2016–17); Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz (2017); Museum Charlottenburg-Wilmersdorf at Villa Oppenheim, Berlin (2017–18); Potsdam Museum–Forum für Kunst und Geschichte (2017–18); Museum Schlösschen im Hofgarten, Wertheim (2018); and the Kallmann-Museum in Ismaning (2018).

Exhibition Catalogue: Fritz Ascher: Expressionist is accompanied by a 300-page bilingual catalogue. Published by Wienand, Cologne, in 2016, the catalogue includes essays by Rachel Stern, the founding director and CEO of the Fritz Ascher Society for Persecuted, Ostracized and Banned Art, Inc., New York; Jörn Barfod, curator at the Ostpreußisches Landesmuseum, Lüneburg; Ingrid Mössinger, former director of the Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz; Ori Z. Soltes, professor at the Center of Jewish Civilization, Georgetown University, Washington DC; and curator and art historian Eckhart Gillen. Also included are selections from Fritz Ascher’s poetry.

Fritz Ascher: Expressionist was organized by the Fritz Ascher Society for Persecuted, Ostracized and Banned Art, Inc. and curated by director Rachel Stern. The exhibition is part of Wunderbar Together: The Year of German-American Friendship 2018/19, an initiative of the Federal Foreign Office of Germany and the Goethe-Institut, with the support of the Federation of German Industries (BDI). Support for the catalogue was provided by Reinwald GmbH, Leipzig. The presentation at the Grey Art Gallery is made possible in part by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature; Ruth Ivor Foundation; Charina Endowment Fund; Violet Jabara Charitable Trust; Abby Weed Grey Trust; and the Grey’s Director’s Circle, Inter/National Council, and Friends. 

Grey Art Gallery, New York University
100 Washington Square East, New York, NY 10003
greyartgallery.nyu.edu

16/11/15

Munch and Expressionism @ Neue Galerie, New York

Munch and Expressionism
Neue Galerie, New York
February 18 - June 13, 2016

On February 18, 2016, Neue Galerie New York will open "Munch and Expressionism," an exhibition that examines Edvard Munch’s influence on his German and Austrian contemporaries, as well as their influence upon him. The show will offer a compelling new look at works by the Norwegian artist, whose painting The Scream has become a symbol of modern angst. The Neue Galerie is the sole venue for the exhibition, where it will be on view through June 13, 2016.

The show, curated by Expressionist scholar Dr. Jill Lloyd, has been organized in tandem with Munch specialist Dr. Reinhold Heller. Dr. Lloyd has assembled several important exhibitions for the Neue Galerie, including "Van Gogh and Expressionism" in 2007 and "Ferdinand Hodler: View to Infinity" in 2012. As an independent art historian, she has also curated exhibitions at the Tate, the Royal Academy in London, and the National Gallery in Washington, D.C. She has written extensively on Expressionist art.

Edvard Munch (1863-1944) was highly regarded for his exploration of dark themes, including alienation, sin, and human vulnerability. Munch’s use of vivid color intensifies the emotional power of his subject matter, an approach which helped to pave the way for an entirely new attitude towards art during the early twentieth century. Although much has been written about the relationship between Munch’s personal life and his art, this exhibition is the first thorough study of the artist’s work in the context of his German and Austrian peers.

The exhibition will be comprised of approximately 35 paintings and 50 works on paper from both public and private collections worldwide. The German artists included in the exhibition are Max Beckmann, Erich Heckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Gabriele Münter, and Emile Nolde, and the Austrians included are Richard Gerstl, Oskar Kokoschka, and Egon Schiele. The curator will compare all of these artists’ approaches to key themes such as adolescence, urban anxiety, and self-portraiture, and to innovative developments in printmaking during this time. The exhibition will include several works that have never before been seen in the United States.

A fully illustrated catalogue, published by Prestel Verlag, will accompany the exhibition featuring contributions by leading scholars in the field, including Patricia Berman, Nelson Blitz, Alison Chang, Jay Clarke, Reinhold Heller, Jill Lloyd, Nils Ohlsen, and Øystein Uvstedt. This authoritative and beautifully illustrated book will explore Munch’s impact on German and Austrian artists of the period within an Expressionist context.

Neue Galerie New York
Museum for German and Austrian Art
1048 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10028
www.meuegalerie.org

06/09/15

Georg Baselitz: Black Out Paintings at McCabe Fine Art, Stockholm

Georg Baselitz
Black Out Paintings
McCabe Fine Art, Stockholm
September 2 - November 28, 2015

McCabe Fine Art presents its first exhibition of work by German artist GEORG BASELITZ. Having gained notoriety and critical attention in the 1960s, Georg Baselitz (b. 1938) is among the most successful artists to come out of Germany. Influenced by folk art as well as German Expressionism, Georg Baselitz incorporates elements of both styles into a unique blend of figuration and abstraction. His Neo-Expressionist paintings, which often depict discombobulated or upside down figures, reflect complex and disorienting themes surrounding German identity in the post-World War II era. In particular, Baselitz himself is concerned with what it means to be a contemporary German artist.

The paintings  on view at McCabe Fine Art are from Baselitz’s “Collusion” series (“Verdunkelung,” in German), which the artist began in 2008. The title of this series refers to the wartime practice of blacking out windows as a means of protection against enemy airstrikes. In each painting a sketchy white figure appears frail and ghostlike against a dark murky background. Drips and splatters of runny white paint erupt from these male nudes, recalling one of Baselitz’s earliest and most well-known paintings: The Big Night Down the Drain (1962/63.) When exhibited as part of the artist’s first solo show, this seminal work depicting a topless man holding his disproportionately large penis in his hand was deemed obscene. The painting was confiscated by the authorities, and Georg Baselitz and his two dealers were fined. Typical of Baselitz’s oeuvre, which includes paintings, sculptures and prints, the “Collusion” paintings conflate history (most often, as in this case, the darkness, despair, and vileness of World War II) with a reference to his own personal history.

Given Baselitz’s strong connections to Nordic art and artists, it is important that a solo exhibition of his work is being held in Stockholm. Baselitz’s subject matter, which features soldiers, forests, woodsman and animals, relates directly to traditional Nordic painting. Specifically, several late 19th century/early 20th century Nordic painters have had a great influence on the German artist. Foremost is Edvard Munch (1863–1944), Baselitz’s great appreciation for whom is evidenced in his expressionistic style and haunting treatment of psychological themes. Baselitz’s deep fascination with Munch has even manifested itself in the form of several portraits. In addition, Swedish artists from the same generation such as Carl Fredrik Hill (1849– 1911), Ernst Josephson (1851–1906), and August Strindberg (1849–1912) are important references for Georg Baselitz. Since the beginning of his career Georg Baselitz has returned again and again to paintings by Scandinavian artists for inspiration.

GEORG BASELITZ

Georg Baselitz lives and work in Germany. Major retrospectives of his work have been held worldwide, including at the Whitechapel Art Gallery, London (1983; traveled to Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, and Kunsthalle Basel); Centre Pompidou, Paris (1993); Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York (1995; traveled to Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, and Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin); Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris (1996); and Royal Academy of Arts, London (2007). Georg Baselitz has represented Germany at the Venice Biennale (1980) and participated in Documenta 7 in Kassel, Germany (1982). Eight new large-scale works by Georg Baselitz, which comprise his series titled Fällt von der Wand nicht (Doesn't Fall From the Wall), are exhibited at the Arsenale at the 56th Venice Biennale (2015). He is also a professor at the Hochschule der Kunste art academy in Berlin.

MCCABE FINE ART
Artillerigatan 40, 11445 Stockholm

04/07/13

Expo Lichtenstein : Expressionism, Gagosian Gallery Paris

Lichtenstein : Expressionism 
Gagosian Gallery Paris
Jusqu'au 12 octobre 2013

En même temps que la rétrospective Roy Lichtenstein au Centre Pompidou, la galerie Gagosian de Paris présente une très intéressante sélection d'oeuvres de l'artiste américain qui est l'une des principales figures de l'art contemporain du 20e siècle. L'exposition à la Gagosian Gallery concentre son attention sur l'appropriation par Roy Lichtenstein des thématiques expressionnistes.

ROY LICHTENSTEIN
The White Tree, 1980 
Oil and Magna on canvas 105 x 204 inches (266.7 x 518.2 cm) 
© Estate of Roy Lichtenstein 

Les premières appropriations de l’esthétique de la culture populaire américaine par ROY LICHTENSTEIN (1923 - 1997) en ont fait un acteur majeur du développement du Pop Art. Tout en s’inspirant des œuvres de Pablo Picasso, Joan Miró ou Paul Klee, il a incorporé dans sa peinture des éléments emblématiques de l’art contemporain mais aussi de magazines populaires. Dès 1961 il commence à utiliser la technique d’impression de points Benday utilisée dans les bandes dessinées, les journaux et les panneaux d'affichage, une technique qui est devenue la signature de son travail. En imitant cette méthode industrielle et en s’appropriant des images de haute et de basse culture, Roy Lichtenstein a permis de rendre l'art contemporain accessible au plus grand nombre, une situation inexistante jusqu’alors. Certaines de ses séries les plus iconiques trouvent leur imagerie dans la culture Pop : les publicités, les bandes dessinées de guerre, les pin-up ; mais aussi dans des genres plus traditionnels comme les paysages ou les natures mortes. En  se concentrant sur l'histoire de l'art, Roy Lichtenstein a commencé à explorer des motifs architecturaux plus classiques. En effet, dès la fin des années 1960, des éléments caractéristiques du futurisme mais aussi du cubisme, du surréalisme et de l’expressionnisme apparaissent régulièrement dans son travail.

Parmi les styles et les mouvements que Roy Lichtenstein s’est approprié, on trouve les motifs expressionnistes, le gros plan d'Alexei Jawlensky, les visages songeurs et les figures félines déchiquetées d’Ernst Ludwig Kirchner qui démontrent la plus transparente des ironies. En incluant des peintures clés, de la sculpture, des dessins et des gravures sur bois, cette exposition révèle le paradoxe audacieux posé par Roy Lichtenstein en interprétant des sujets expressionnistes avec des couleurs primaires et la planéité caractéristique du style Pop Art. Parfois il a substitué au système de points Benday, des rayures, des ombres et de la grisaille évoquant des gravures sur bois expressionnistes, allant ainsi jusqu’à créer ses propres gravures sur bois intégrant une rhétorique expressionniste. Cette exploration a été réalisée en trois dimensions avec le bronze peint : Expressionist Head (1980), invraisemblablement incliné.

Pendant un voyage à Los Angeles en 1978, Lichtenstein resta fasciné par la collection de gravures expressionnistes allemandes et les livres illustrés de l'avocat Robert Rifkind. Il a alors commencé à produire des œuvres qui empruntaient des éléments stylistiques trouvés dans des peintures expressionnistes. The White Tree (1980) évoque les paysages lyriques de Der Blaue Reiter, tandis que Dr. Waldmann (1980) rappelle le Dr. Mayer-Hermann d'Otto Dix (1926). 

ROY LICHTENSTEIN
Dr. Waldmann, 1980 
Woodcut with embossing on Arches Cover paper 41 5/8 x 34 1/4 inches (105.7 x 87 cm) 
Edition of 50 + 13 AP 
© Estate of Roy Lichtenstein / Gemini G.E.L. 

Des petits dessins au crayon de couleur ont été utilisés comme modèles pour des gravures sur bois, un moyen d’expression favorisé par Emil Nolde et Max Pechstein, mais aussi par Dix et Kirchner. Head (1980), une gravure sur bois imprimée autant en noir qu'en sept couleurs, a été créée à partir d’un bloc de bois de bouleau que Roy Lichtenstein a coupé à travers le grain pour imiter la surface lisse et la coloration équilibrée de ses peintures. En gardant certains effets stylistiques de l’expressionisme mais en abandonnant sa charge émotionnelle, ou encore en s’inspirant  d’éléments d’autres mouvements artistiques, Roy Lichtenstein a véritablement remis en question les différences de mouvement de l’histoire de l’art.

ROY LICHTENSTEIN
Head, 1980 
Oil and Magna on canvas 50 x 36 inches (127 x 91.4 cm) 
© Estate of Roy Lichtenstein 

L’exposition Lichtenstein : Expressionism est accompagnée d’un catalogue entièrement illustré comprenant un essai par Brenda Schmahmann, une conversation entre Hans Ulrich Obrist et Mayen Beckmann et une conversation entre Ruth Fine et Sidney B. Felsen.

Cette exposition a été préparée en étroite collaboration avec la Fondation Roy Lichtenstein et l’Estate of Roy Lichtenstein. 

ROY LICHTENSTEIN est né en 1923 à New York, où il est mort en 1997. Son travail a été exposé dans le monde entier. Parmi les récentes rétrospectives on compte "All about Art", au Louisiana Museum, Humelbaek en 2003, exposée ensuite à  la Hayward Gallery à Londres ; au Musée Reina Sofia, à Madrid ; et au Musée d'Art Moderne de San Francisco, en 2005 ; " Classic of the New", Kunsthaus Bregenz (2005) ; et "Roy Lichtenstein : Meditations on Art", au Museo Triennale, à Milan en 2010, exposée ensuite au Museum Ludwig à Cologne : Roy Lichtenstein: Art as Motif. L’exposition "Roy Lichtenstein: A Retrospective" a débuté à l’Art Institute of Chicago en mai 2012 puis à la National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. , à la Tate Modern à Londres et actuellement au Centre Georges Pompidou à Paris.

GAGOSIAN GALLERY
4, rue de Ponthieu - 75008 Paris
Site web : www.gagosian.com

11/11/12

Villa Grisebach, Berlin: 200th auction celebrated with seven artworks auctions


Masterpieces of German Expressionism and Twentieth Century Art 
Exceptional Offerings at Grisebach’s Fall Auctions - Inaugural Auction ORANGERIE - Selected Objects From Two Millennia  
At Villa Grisebach Auction House in Berlin, Germany

Villa Grisebach invites to Fasanenstrasse in Berlin to celebrate her 200th auction. From November 28 to December 1, 2012, in seven auctions, each accompanied by a separate catalogue, a total of more than 1,200 works of art with a pre-sale estimate of 17 to 23 million euros will be offered.  


OTTO MUELLER, Zwei Mädchen (Zwei Mädchenakte in Dreiviertelfigur), Circa 1924  
Distemper on burlap. Relined. 120 x 89,5 cm 
Photo Courtesy Grisebach, Berlin

Masterpieces of German Expressionism take the lead with the large-format painting “Zwei Mädchen” by Otto Mueller of 1924 (€ 800,000/1,200,000), Schmidt-Rottluff’s important 1919 double portrait “Frauen am Meer” (€ 400,000/600,000), Max Pechstein’s powerful “Sonnenuntergang am Meer” of 1921 (€ 400,000/600,000), Erich Heckel’s “Blick aufs Meer” at the Flensburg Förde of 1920 (€ 300,000/400,000) and a watercolor, saturated in intensely glowing hues, by Emil Nolde, “Zwei bärtige Männer (Apostel)” (€ 300,000/400,000). 

OTTO DIX, Sonnenaufgang, 1913 
Oil on paper on cardboard. 50,5 x 66 cm
Photo Courtesy Grisebach, Berlin

Another piece of museum quality is “Sonnenaufgang” by Otto Dix (€ 300,000/400,000), created in 1913 it can be seen as an apocalyptic vision of the First World War. Originally in the collection of the Dresden Stadtmuseum, the painting was displayed in the 1937 propaganda show “Degenerate Art.“ Since the 1960s, due to its significance, it has been included in many exhibitions in Germany and abroad. 


WILLI BAUMEISTER, Kessaua statuarisch, 1954 
Oil with resin on masonite. 65 x 81 cm 
Photo Courtesy Grisebach, Berlin

German post-war art is represented by superb works by Willi Baumeister (“Kessaua statuarisch,” 1954,  € 250,000/300,000), Ernst Wilhelm Nay (“Motion,” 1962, € 300,000/400,000), and Emil Schumacher (“Hephatos,” 1959, € 220,000/280,000) leading over to the contemporary art section. 

Here, Andy Warhol’s  large-format “Friedrich der Grosse,” entrusted to Grisebach by the Daimler AG (€ 700,000/1,000,000), and Anselm Kiefer’s “Odin and the World-Ash” (€ 400,000/600,000) take first positions.  

ANDY WARHOL, Friedrich der Grosse, 1986 
Acrylic and screenprint on canvas, 213 x 184 cm
Photo Courtesy Grisebach, Berlin

ANSELM KIEFER, Odin and the World-Ash, 1981 
Oil over woodcut over wove paper on burlap, 170,5 x 190,2 cm 
Photo Courtesy Grisebach, Berlin

On the occasion of Villa Grisebach’s 200th auction the renowed german auction house's program expanded once again: The new department “ORANGERIE” offers selected objects from an Attic stamnos from  the 6th century B.C. (€ 80,000/100,000) to four of Mies van der Rohe’s “MR10” tubular steel chairs of 1927 (€ 10,000/15,000). The 2012 celebrations of Prussian King Frederick the Great’s 300th birthday are reflected in this auction by the rediscovered first marble bust of his descendant, Queen Luise, created by Christian Daniel Rauch in 1804 and believed to be lost until recently (€ 100,000/150,000).

Bernd Schultz: “We are pleased to offer in our 200th auction museum-quality examples of German Expressionism that, in many cases, have not surfaced the market for several decades. The strong offerings in our post-war art section is a sign for the  growing importance of the activities in our contemporary art department. For me, a  personal pleasure is our new department, ORANGERIE, which we designed to entice our clients to collect exceptional objects from ancient times through today.” 

Villa Grisebach's Auction dates 

- 19th Century Art: Wednesday, 28 November 2012, 2:30 pm
Modern and Contemporary Photographs (read previous post): Wednesday, 28 November 2012, 5 pm
- ORANGERIE - Selected Objects: Thursday, 29 November 2012, 11 am
- Selected Works: Thursday, 29 November 2012, 5 pm
- Modern Art: Friday, 30 November 2012, 11 am
- Post-War and Contemporary Art: Friday, 30 November 2012, 2:30 pm
- Benefit Auction for the Max Beckmann Distinguished Visitorship of the American Academy in Berlin: Friday, 30 November 2012, 7 pm
- Third Floor - Estimate up to € 3,000: Saturday, 1 December 2012, 11 AM (Part I) and 2:30 PM (Part II)

All auction catalogues are available at www.villa-grisebach.com. Preview exhibitions will be held in Berlin from November 23 to 27 at three venues at Fasanenstrasse.

Text by Micaela Kapitzky

Villa Grisebach Auktionen GmbH  
Fasanenstrasse 25 • D-10719 Berlin

14/10/07

Chaim Soutine, Pinacotheque de Paris


Chaïm Soutine
Pinacothèque de Paris
October 10, 2007 - January 27, 2008

A central figure in the artworld, the least well-known and the most mysterious in his own generation of artists, Chaim Soutine (1893-1943) was the focus of a major exhibition in Paris for the first time in 33 years, in the Orangerie.

Chaim Soutine arrived in Paris in July 1913 and discovered a world far removed from his native Russia. He was very soon classified as a Jewish immigrant, as a typical artist of the Ecole de Paris, with all the prejudices that that entailed. Frequently regarded as no more than a follower, he was part of the Montparnasse legend thanks to his friendship with Modigliani, to whom he was extremely close.

It was while studying Soutine’s portrait by Modigliani that Marc Restellini decided to put on this exhibition. In that sublime portrait, he discovered that the handsome Italian endowed Soutine,  as discreetly as possible, with a religious symbolism by painting him with his left hand carrying out the Cohen’s benediction, that family of High priests in the Temple of Jerusalem. This deliberately secretive detail revealed an out-of-the common personality that might have escaped everyone but which Modigliani nonetheless wanted to immortalize, as though to confer a  mystical dimension on Soutine.

His exceptional personality led him to develop an artform that was misunderstood for a long while, marginalized, often linked to the notion of a difficult, unhealthy artist, on whom all the clichés of the ambient anti-Semitism were heaped, and which turned him into an outcast from his very first arrival in Paris. Like Modigliani, he had a most unusual career, wrapped in legends; a doomed artist, he died without having ever been fully appreciated in his lifetime. Even nowadays the only image left of Soutine is that of a Jewish immigrant bowed under the weight of all the taboos of an overly restrictive religion and whose physical appearance lent itself to every kind of antiSemitic cliché.

It was high time that a Parisian institution put an end to all these outdated notions and paid a deserved homage to this artist whom it is essential to rediscover.

This exhibition will show a brilliant artist, an inquisitor of souls and minds, through approximately 80 paintings, most of which are totally re-discovered works, exhibited for the very first time. Many canvases were restored for this occasion. The ensemble comes from the most important private collections as well as from international museums: French, Japanese, Swiss and American.

Through his use of portraiture, Soutine examined the personalities of his chosen sitters. He showed up their quintessential characteristics, and drew out of each of them what no other artist had perceived. He was quite rightly described as an Expressionist, and was the only one to have represented that movement in France, whereas it was the very basis of all the developing movements, be it in Germany and in Austria at the same period. A true visionary, he transcended reality to transform it into an imaginary representation about a century ahead of his time. On the cusp of several movements still in their infancy, he based his art on the most classical and the most illustrious of his fore-runners (Rembrandt, Courbet, Corot, Cézanne….) to become the major precursor of the greatest contemporary artists from Pollock to De Kooning. He was a reference for all of the Cobra movement, as well as for Bacon, whose pictorial powerfulness descends directly from Soutine. 

Today the Pinacothèque de Paris wants to throw a new light on the works by this essential artist from the start of the 20th century, thanks to loans shown for the first and, quite probably, the last time. 

The very well documented catalogue, will provide us with a closer look at all of the essential aspects that make up Soutine’s powerfulness and uniqueness: his links to Judaism, his critical heritage, his triangular relationship with Albert Barnes and Paul Guillaume which led him to fame and fortune, his artistic characteristics, as well as his cultural links with the past and the future, his passion for series like that of Monet, and his powers of anticipation. 

These many features will totally renew the look cast upon Chaim Soutine’s body of work that Jacqueline Munck, Sophie Krebs, Claudine Gramont and Marc Restellini aim to emphasize. 

Overall curator of the exhibition : Marc Restellini

Pinacothèque de Paris - 28, Place de la Madeleine  - 75008 Paris
Web site : www.pinacotheque.com