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Paul Klee

 
Who2 Biography: Paul Klee, Artist
 

  • Born: 18 December 1879
  • Birthplace: Münchenbuchsee, Switzerland
  • Died: 29 June 1940
  • Best Known As: Post-impressionist Swiss painter of The Twittering Machine

Paul Klee was a Swiss-German artist known for the fine lines and playful geometry in his childlike watercolors and illustrations. His mother was Swiss and his father was German, and Klee was raised in Switzerland but spent most of his adult life in Germany, where he studied art at the end of the nineteenth century. A skilled illustrator and respected teacher at the Bauhaus, Klee was part of Der Blaue Reiter, the avant-garde circle co-founded by Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky. Influenced by Cubism and drawn to the expressiveness of primitive art and children's paintings, Klee produced nearly 10,000 works in a variety of media, but is mostly known for his watercolor paintings. At the peak of his career his work was deemed "degenerate" by the Nazi party of Adolf Hitler and removed from all public exhibits. He left Germany and returned to Switzerland in 1933, but by 1935 was ill with what has since been diagnosed as scleroderma, a rare condition that hardens the skin. Despite his ill health, Klee remained creative and prolific until his untimely death in 1940. Some of his best-known works include Southern (Tunisian) Gardens (1919), The Twittering Machine (1922) and Fish Magic (1925).

Because of his father's nationality, Klee was considered German, despite having been born and raised in Switzerland. Despite his attempts to become a Swiss citizen, he was not granted citizenship until shortly after his death... Klee was an accomplished musician who played violin for a time with the Bern symphony orchestra... While an art professor, Klee wrote the influential textbook Pädagogisches Skizzenbuch ( Pedagogical Sketchbook).

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Art Encyclopedia: Paul Klee
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(b M?nchenbuchsee, nr Berne, 18 Dec 1879; d Muralto, nr Locarno, 29 June 1940). Swiss painter, draughtsman, printmaker, teacher and writer. Klee's work forms a major contribution to the history of 20th-century art. He is associated most commonly with the Bauhaus school in Weimar and Dessau. He is regarded as a major theoretician among modern artists and as a master of humour and mystery. In much of his work, he aspired to achieve a naive and untutored quality, but his art is also among the most cerebral of any of the 20th century. Klee's wide-ranging intellectual curiosity is evident in an art profoundly informed by structures and themes drawn from music, nature and poetry.

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Biography: Paul Klee
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Paul Klee (1879-1940) was a Swiss painter and graphic artist of extraordinary formal inventiveness whose art combined a childlike, primary vision and the utmost sophistication.

Paul Klee was one of the great masters who established the essence and character of modern art. He was an artist of a creative capacity and an artistic range and depth that had not existed in German countries since Albrecht Dürer's time. Like Dürer, Klee was predominantly a draftsman. Color entered his art late, and the main body of his work was always dominated by the linear component. His fantasy seemed inexhaustible - the demonic bordering on the grotesque, the humorous on the anecdotal - but it was always rooted in his metaphysical, even mystical, attitude to life and art. Klee was also an outstanding writer on formal and esthetic problems and a distinguished teacher. To him we owe some of the most beautiful statements on modern art.

In Klee's work, thought and emotion form a whole out of which grows a myth of universal validity. Thus, he wrote: "My hand is only a tool of a far-off sphere. Nor is it my head that functions but something else, something higher, farther, somewhere. … The primitive mentality does not invent myths, it experiences them. … Progression toward a philosophy of life is essentially productive. … At the point where the central organ of all temporal spatial movement rules all functions: who would not live there as an artist? There, in the womb of nature, where the secret key to all being is hidden? … Our quaking hearts drive us downward, deep down to the origin of things."

Klee was born on Dec. 18, 1879, in München-Buchsee near Berne. His father was a musician, and in his youth Paul could not decide whether to become a musician or a painter. He was a fine violinist, and music remained a source of inspiration throughout his life.

Early Influences

In 1898 Klee went to Munich, Germany, where he studied briefly with Erwin Knirr and then attended the academy until 1901, studying with Franz von Stuck. The Jugendstil with its emphasis on curved lines and the fin-desiècle symbolism and romanticism of the Munich school influenced the young Klee, who admired Odilon Redon, Aubrey Beardsley, William Blake, Francisco Goya, and James Ensor. In 1901 Klee visited Italy, and in 1905 he made his first trip to Paris. Between 1902 and 1906 he lived in Berne, where he produced his first characteristic works.

In 1906 Klee married the pianist Lily Stumpf and moved to Munich. They had one son, Felix. Klee exhibited etchings in the Munich Secession in 1906, and the first large exhibition of his graphic works took place in Switzerland in 1910. The following year Klee met the artists of the Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider) group and exhibited drawings at the Galerie Tannhauser in Munich. In 1912 Klee visited Paris, where he met Robert Delaunay, whose Orphist paintings stimulated him; saw pictures by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque; and was much impressed by the works of Paul Cézanne, Vincent Van Gogh, and Henri Matisse. This trip to Paris and one to Kairouan in Tunisia in 1914 in the company of August Macke and Louis Moilliet were decisive for Klee as a painter. At the age of 35 he was still predominantly a draftsman and only occasionally a watercolorist. But after his trip to Tunisia all the influences he had been absorbing fused into a totality, and his unique pictorial metaphor was established.

Bauhaus Years

In 1914 Klee helped to found the Neue Münchner Sezession (New Munich Secession). From 1916 to 1918 he served in the German army. In 1920 he had a large retrospective at the Gallery Goltz in Munich and was invited to teach at the Bauhaus in Weimar. He taught there and at the Bauhaus in Dessau until 1931; the Bauhaus years were most inspiring for Klee both as an artist and as a teacher. In 1923 he had a one-man show at the Kronprinzenpalais in Berlin, and the following year his first exhibition in the United States took place.

In 1924 Klee made a trip to Sicily, in 1926 to Italy, in 1927 to Corsica. He was one of the founders of the Blaue Vier (Blue Four) group in 1924. The following year he participated in the first surrealist exhibition in Paris. In the winter of 1928/1929 Klee visited Egypt. To celebrate his fiftieth birthday, Klee was given a major retrospective in Berlin in 1929. His work became more inaccessible to rational analysis. The titles of his works, which had always been poetic and surprising, became mystical, for example, Archangels, Angels Bring What Is Longed For, and Saints of the Inner Light.

Last Works

In 1931 Klee began to teach at the Düsseldorf Art Academy; the Nazis dismissed him from his post in 1933. He returned to Berne, where he lived the rest of his life. In 1935 and 1936 he had large exhibitions in Switzerland. In 1935 the first signs of the illness that caused his death appeared. His paintings became larger, more hieroglyphic, and more remote; they are filled with images of death and angels.

In 1937 Picasso, Braque, and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner visited Klee in Berne. That year his works were included in the Nazi exhibition of "degenerate" art in Munich, and 102 of them were confiscated from public collections in Germany.

Klee's most important writings are the Pädagogisches Skizzenbuch (1925; Pedagogical Sketch Book, 1944); Schöpferische Konfession (1920; Creative Credo); and Ü ber die Moderne Kunst (1945; On Modern Art, 1947), a lecture delivered at the Jena Kunstverein in 1924. He executed nearly 9,000 individual works, beginning with a preponderance of pen and pencil drawings and gradually expanding to watercolors and oil paintings. He died on June 29, 1940, at Muralto near Locarno.

Further Reading

The most comprehensive study of Klee is Will Grohmann, Paul Klee (1954), which contains extensive quotations from Klee's writings, a bibliography, and an index. See also Carola Giedion-Welcker, Paul Klee (trans. 1952). Important books on special aspects of Klee's art are Karl Nierendorf, Paul Klee: Paintings, Watercolors, 1913-1939 (1941); Margaret Miller, ed., Paul Klee (1941), which has statements by the artist and articles by Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Julia and Lyonel Feininger, and James Johnson Sweeney; James Thrall Soby, The Prints of Paul Klee (1945); Werner Haftmann, The Mind and Work of Paul Klee (1954), a penetrating study of Klee's philosophy, his art theory, and his teaching method; and Jürg Spiller, ed., Paul Klee: The Thinking Eye (1956; trans. 1961), which contains Klee's notebooks with all particulars of pedagogical importance.

 

Klee, 1939
(click to enlarge)
Klee, 1939 (credit: Aufnahme Fotopress)
(born Dec. 18, 1879, Münchenbuchsee, Switz. — died June 29, 1940, Muralto) Swiss painter. After studies in Germany and Italy, he settled in Munich, where he became associated with Der Blaue Reiter (1911). He taught at the Bauhaus (1920 – 31), then at the Düsseldorf Academy. He lost his post when the Nazis came to power in 1933 and returned to Switzerland. One of the foremost artists of the 20th century, he belonged to no movement, yet he assimilated and even anticipated some of the major artistic tendencies of his time. Using both representational and abstract approaches, he produced some 9,000 paintings, drawings, and watercolours in a great variety of styles. His works, which tend to be small in scale, are remarkable for their delicate nuances of line, colour, and tonality. In Klee's highly sophisticated art, irony and a sense of the absurd are joined to an intense evocation of the mystery and beauty of nature. Music figures prominently in his work — in his many images of opera and musicians, and to some extent as a model for his compositions. But literature had the greater pull on him; his art is steeped in poetic and mythic allusion, and the titles he gave to his pictures tend to charge them with additional meanings. His late paintings, anticipating his approaching death, are among his most memorable.

For more information on Paul Klee, visit Britannica.com.

 

Klee, Paul (nr. Berne, 1879-1940, Locarno), was in touch with Expressionist artists in Munich, and developed an independent, virtually Surrealistic, style which has been termed Bildsprache. In 1921-30 he was a professor at the Bauhaus, and then until 1933 at Düsseldorf before emigrating to Berne on the establishment of the National Socialist regime. In 1937 his work was declared ‘degenerate’ (see Entartete Kunst), and a large number of his works were impounded. His early publications include Pädagogisches Skizzenbuch (1925) and Wissenschaftliche Experimente im Bereiche der Kunst (1928); posthumous publications include Über die moderne Kunst (1945), Das bildnerische Denken (ed. J. Spiller, 1956), and Tagebücher 1898-1918 (ed. F. Klee, 1957).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Paul Klee
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Klee, Paul (poul klā) , 1879–1940, Swiss painter, graphic artist, and art theorist, b. near Bern. Klee's enormous production (more than 10,000 paintings, drawings, and etchings) is unique in that it represents the successful combination of his sophisticated theories of art with a very personal inventiveness that has the appearance of great innocence. The son of a music teacher, Klee himself was a violinist, and musical analogies permeate his writing and his approach to art. He traveled through Europe, open to many artistic influences. The most important of these were the works of Blake, Beardsley, Goya, Ensor, and, especially, Cézanne. In 1911 he became associated with the Blaue Reiter group and later exhibited as one of the Blue Four. Klee's awakening to color occurred on a trip to Tunis in 1914, a year after he had met Delaunay and been made aware of new theories of color use. Thereafter his whimsical and fantastic images were rendered with a luminous and subtle color sense.

Klee's works are neither abstract nor figurative, but have strong elements of both approaches. Characteristic of his gently witty paintings are The Twittering Machine (1922, Mus. of Modern Art, New York City) and Fish Magic (1925, Phila. Mus. of Art). Other works reveal strong, rhythmic patterns, as in the unsettling Viaducts Break Ranks (1937, Hamburg). World famous by 1929, Klee taught at the Bauhaus (1920–31) and at the Düsseldorf academy (1931–33) until the Nazis, who judged his work degenerate, forced him to resign. He and his family fled Germany for his native city in 1933. In his series of Pedagogical Sketchbooks (tr. 1944) and lecture notes entitled The Thinking Eye (tr. 1961), Klee sought to define his intuitive approach to artistic creation. His last ten years were spent in Switzerland, and some 4,000 of his works are in the Paul Klee Center, Bern.

Bibliography

See his notebooks, ed. by J. Spiller (2 vol., tr. 1992); his diaries, ed. by his son Felix Klee (tr. 1964); his life and work in documents, ed. by F. Klee (tr. 1962); studies by J. M. Joran (1984), C. Lanchner, ed. (1987), O. K. Werckmeister (1989), and M. Franciscono (1991).

 
Fine Arts Dictionary: Klee, Paul
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(klay)

A Swiss artist who painted mainly in the twentieth century. He is known for his whimsical, small-scale works that display a mastery of line, form, and subtle colors.

  • Klee taught at the Bauhaus from 1920 to 1931.

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    Quotes By: Paul Klee
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    Quotes:

    "Democracy with its semi-civilization sincerely cherishes junk. The artist's power should be spiritual. But the power of the majority is material. When these worlds meet occasionally, it is pure coincidence."

    "In the final analysis, a drawing simply is no longer a drawing, no matter how self-sufficient its execution may be. It is a symbol, and the more profoundly the imaginary lines of projection meet higher dimensions, the better."

    "Genius sits in a glass house -- but in an unbreakable one --conceiving ideas. After giving birth, it falls into madness. Stretches out its hand through the window toward the first person happening by. The demon's claw rips, the iron fist grips. Before, you were a model, mocks the ironic voice between serrated teeth, for me, you are raw material to work on. I throw you against the glass wall, so that you remain stuck there, projected and stuck. (Then come the lovers of art and contemplate the bleeding work from outside. Then come the photographers. New art, it says in the newspaper the following day. The learned journals give it a name that ends in ism.)"

    "The art of mastering life is the prerequisite for all further forms of expression, whether they are paintings, sculptures, tragedies, or musical compositions."

    "Nature is garrulous to the point of confusion, let the artist be truly taciturn."

    "Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible."

    See more famous quotes by Paul Klee

     
    Wikipedia: Paul Klee
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    Paul Klee

    Self Portrait (1911), ink on paper
    Born 18 December 1879
    Münchenbuchsee bei Bern, Switzerland
    Died 29 June 1940 (aged 60)
    Muralto, Switzerland
    Nationality German/Swiss
    Field painting
    Training Academy of Fine Arts, Munich
    Movement expressionism cubism surrealism
    Works more than 10,000 paintings, drawings, and etchings, including The Twittering Machine (1922), Fish Magic (1925), Viaducts Break Ranks (1937).

    Paul Klee (German pronunciation: [kleː]; 18 December 1879 – 29 June 1940) was a Swiss painter of German nationality.[a] His highly individual style was influenced by movements in art that included expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. He was, as well, a student of orientalism.[1] Klee was a natural draftsman who experimented with and eventually mastered color theory, and wrote extensively about it. His works reflect his dry humor and his sometimes child-like perspective, his personal moods and beliefs, and his musicality. He and his friend, the Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, both taught at the German Bauhaus school of art and architecture.

    Contents

    Early life and training

    First of all, the art of living; then as my ideal profession, poetry and philosophy, and as my real profession, plastic arts; in the last resort, for lack of income, illustrations.

    —Paul Klee.[2]

    Klee was born in Münchenbuchsee (near Bern), Switzerland into a musical family. His father, Hans Klee, was a German music teacher at the Hofwil Teacher Seminar near Bern. His mother, Ida Frick, had trained to be a singer. He was the second of two children.[3]

    My Room (German: Meine Bude), 1896. Pen and ink wash, 4 3/4 x 7 1/2 inches. In the collection of the Klee Foundation, Bern, Switzerland.

    Klee started young at both art and music. At age seven, he started playing the violin, and at age eight, he was given a box of chalk by his grandmother. Klee appears to have been equally talented in music and art.[4] In his early years, following his parents’ wishes, he focused on becoming a musician; but he decided on the visual arts during his teen years, partly out of rebellion and partly because of his belief that modern music lacked meaning for him. He stated, “I didn’t find the idea of going in for music creatively particularly attractive in view of the decline in the history of musical achievement.”[5] As a musician, he played and felt emotionally bound to traditional works of the 18th and 19th century, but as an artist he craved the freedom to explore radical ideas and styles.[5] At sixteen, Klee’s landscape drawings already show considerable skill.[6]

    Around 1897, he started his diary, which he kept until 1918, and which has provided scholars with valuable insight into his life and thinking.[7] During his school years, he avidly drew in his school books, in particular drawing caricatures, and already demonstrating skill with line and volume.[8] He barely passed his final exams at the “Gymnasium” of Bern, where he qualified in the Humanities. With his characteristic dry wit, he wrote, “After all, it’s rather difficult to achieve the exact minimum, and it evolves risks.”[9] On his own time, in addition to his deep interests in music and art, Klee was a great reader of literature, and later a writer on art theory and aesthetics.[10]

    With his parents' reluctant permission, in 1898 he began studying art at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich with Heinrich Knirr and Franz von Stuck. He excelled at drawing but seemed to lack any natural color sense. He later recalled, “During the third winter I even realized that I probably would never learn to paint.”[9] During these times of youthful adventure, Klee spent much time in pubs and had affairs with lower class women and artists' models. He had an illegitimate son in 1900 who died several weeks after birth.[11]

    After receiving his Fine Arts degree, Klee went to Italy for several months with friend Hermann Haller. They stayed in Rome, Florence, and Naples, and studied the master painters of past centuries.[11] He exclaimed, “The Forum and the Vatican have spoken to me. Humanism wants to suffocate me.”[12] He responded to the colors of Italy, but sadly noted, “that a long struggle lies in store for me in this field of color.”[13] For Klee, color represented the optimism and nobility in art, and a hoped for relief from the pessimistic nature he expressed in his black-and-white grotesques and satires.[13] Returning to Bern, he lived with his parents for several years, and took occasional art classes. By 1905, he was developing some experimental techniques, including drawing with a needle on a blackened pane of glass, resulting in fifty-seven works including his Portrait of My Father (1906).[8] He also completed a cycle of eleven zinc-plate etchings called Inventions, his first exhibited works, in which he illustrated several grotesque creatures.[11] He commented, “though I’m fairly satisfied with my etchings I can’t go on like this. I’m not a specialist.”[14] Klee was still dividing his time with music, playing the violin in an orchestra and writing concert and theater reviews.[15]

    Marriage and early career

    Flower Myth (1918), Watercolor on pastel foundation on fabric and newsprint mounted on board, Sprengel Museum, Hannover, Germany.

    Klee married Bavarian pianist Lily Stumpf in 1906 and they had one son named Felix Paul in the following year. They lived in a suburb of Munich, and while she gave piano lessons and occasional performances, he kept house and tended to his art work. His attempt to be a magazine illustrator failed.[15] Klee’s art work progressed slowly for the next five years, partly from having to divide his time with domestic matters, and partly as he tried to find a new approach to his art. In 1910, he had his first solo exhibition in Bern, which then traveled to three Swiss cities. The following year, he did some illustrations for an edition of Voltaire’s Candide. That year he met Wassily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, and other avant-garde figures, and became associated with the art group known as Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Horseman).[16]

    On meeting Kandinsky, Klee recorded, “I came to feel a deep trust in him. He is somebody, and has an exceptionally beautiful and lucid mind.”[17] The association opened his mind to modern theories of color. His travels to Paris in 1912 also exposed him to the ferment of Cubism and the pioneering examples of “pure painting”, an early term for abstract art. The use of bold color by Robert Delaunay and Maurice de Vlaminck also inspired him.[18] Rather than copy these artists, Klee began working out his own color experiments in pale watercolors and did some primitive landscapes, including In the Quarry (1913) and Houses near the Gravel Pit (1913), using blocks of color with limited overlap.[19] Klee acknowledged that in order to reach his “distant noble aim” “a long struggle lies in store for me in this field of color.” Soon, he discovered “the style which connects drawing and the realm of color.”[13]

    Klee’s artistic breakthrough came in 1914 when he briefly visited Tunisia with August Macke and Louis Moilliet and was impressed by the quality of the light there. He wrote, "Colour has taken possession of me; no longer do I have to chase after it, I know that it has hold of me forever... Colour and I are one. I am a painter."[20] With that realization, faithfulness to nature fades in importance. Instead, Klee began to delve into the “cool romanticism of abstraction”.[20] In gaining a second artistic vocabulary, Klee added color to his abilities in draftsmanship, and in many works combined them successfully, as he did in one series he called “operatic paintings”.[21][22] One of the most literal examples of this new synthesis is The Bavarian Don Giovanni (1919).[23]

    After returning home, Klee painted his first pure abstract, In the Style of Kairouan (1914), composed of colored rectangles and a few circles.[24] The colored rectangle became his basic building block, what some scholars associate with a musical note, which Klee combined with other colored blocks to create a color harmony analogous to a musical composition. His selection of a particular color palette emulates a musical key. Sometimes he uses complementary pairs of colors, and other times “dissonant” colors, again reflecting his connection with musicality.[25]

    A few weeks later, World War I began. At first, Klee was somewhat detached from it, as he wrote ironically, “I have long had this war in me. That is why, inwardly, it is none of my concern.” [26] Soon, however, it began to affect him. His friends Macke and Marc both died in battle. Venting his distress, he created several pen and ink lithographs on war themes including Death for the Idea (1915).[27] He also continued with abstracts and semi-abstracts. In 1916, he joined the German war effort, but with behind the scenes maneuvering by his father, Klee was spared serving at the front and ended up painting camouflage on airplanes and working as a clerk.[28] He continued to paint during the entire war and managed to exhibit in several shows. By 1917, Klee’s work was selling well and art critics acclaimed him as the best of the new German artists.[29] His Ab ovo (1917) is particularly noteworthy for its sophisticated technique. It employs watercolor on gauze and paper with a chalk ground, which produces a rich texture of triangular, circular, and crescent patterns.[20] Demonstrating his range of exploration, mixing color and line, his Warning of the Ships (1918) is a colored drawing filled with symbolic images on a field of suppressed color.[30]

    Mature career

    Miraculous Landing, or the "112!" (1920), Watercolor, ink, and monotype on paper. 23.6 x 31.8 cm. In the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC.

    In 1919, Klee applied for a teaching post at the Academy of Art in Düsseldorf. This attempt failed but he had a major success in securing a three-year contract (with a minimum annual income) with dealer Hans Goltz, whose influential gallery gave Klee major exposure, and some commercial success. A retrospective of over 300 works in 1920 was also notable.[31]

    Klee taught at the Bauhaus, the art school newly formed in 1919 to unite arts and crafts in one institution, and to give each student “a thorough training in the workshops of all branches”.[32] Klee was a “Form” master in the bookbinding, stained glass, and mural painting workshops. He was also provided with two studios.[33] In 1922, Kandinsky joined the staff and resumed his friendship with Klee. Later that year the first Bauhaus exhibition and festival was held, for which Klee created several of the advertising materials.[34] Within the Bauhaus there were many conflicting theories and opinions, which Klee welcomed: “I also approve of these forces competing one with the other if the result is achievement.”[35]

    Klee was also a member of Die Blaue Vier (The Blue Four), with Kandinsky, Feininger, and Jawlensky; formed in 1923, they lectured and exhibited together in the USA in 1925. That same year, Klee had his first exhibits in Paris, and he became a hit with the French Surrealists.[36] Klee visited Egypt in 1928, which impressed him less than Tunisia. In 1929, the first major monograph on Klee’s work was published, written by Will Grohmann.[37]

    From nearly the start, the Nazi movement denounced the Bauhaus for its "degenerate art" and in 1933 the Bauhaus was finally shut down. Emigrants did succeed, however, in spreading the concepts of the Bauhaus to other countries, including the “New Bauhaus” of Chicago.[38] Klee also taught at the Düsseldorf Academy from 1931 to 1933, and was singled out by a Nazi newspaper, “Then that great fellow Klee comes onto the scene, already famed as a Bauhaus teacher in Dessau. He tells everyone he’s a thoroughbred Arab, but he’s a typical Galician Jew.”[39] His home was searched and he was fired from his job.[40] His self-portrait Struck from the List (1933) commemorates the sad occasion.[39] In 1933-4, Klee had shows in London and Paris, and finally met Picasso whom he greatly admired.[41] The Klee family emigrated to Switzerland in late 1933.[41]

    Klee was at the peak of his creative output. His Ad Parnassum (1932) is considered his masterpiece and the best example of his pointillist style; it is also one of his largest, most finely worked paintings.[42][43] He produced nearly 500 works in 1933 during his last year in Germany.[44] However, in 1933, Klee began experiencing the symptoms of what was diagnosed as scleroderma after his death. The progression of his fatal disease, which made swallowing very difficult, can be followed through the art he created in his last years. His output in 1936 was only 25 pictures. In the later 1930s, his health recovered somewhat and he was encouraged by a visit from Kandinsky and Picasso.[45] Klee’s simpler and larger designs enabled him to keep up his output in his final years, and in 1939 he created over 1,200 works, a career high for one year.[46] He used heavier lines and mainly geometric forms with fewer but larger blocks of color. His varied color palettes, some with bright colors and others sober, perhaps reflected his alternating moods of optimism and pessimism.[47] Back in Germany in 1937, seventeen of Klee’s pictures were included in an exhibition of “Degenerate Art” and 102 of his works in public collections were seized by the Nazis.[48]

    Death

    He died in Muralto, Locarno, Switzerland, in 1940 without having obtained Swiss citizenship, despite his birth in that country. His art work was considered too revolutionary, even degenerate, by the Swiss authorities, but eventually they accepted his request six days after his death.[49] His legacy comprises about 9,000 works of art.[50] The words on his tombstone, his father’s credo, say, "I cannot be grasped in the here and now, For my dwelling place is much among the dead, As the yet unborn, Slightly closer to the heart of creation than usual, But still not close enough."[51]

    Style and methods

    Tale à la Hoffmann (1921), Watercolor, ink, and pencil on paper. 31.1 x 24.1 cm. In the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC.

    Klee has been variously associated with Expressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Surrealism, and Abstraction, but his pictures are difficult to classify. He generally worked in isolation from his peers, and interpreted new art trends in his own way. He was inventive in his methods and technique. Klee worked in many different media—oil paint, watercolor, ink, pastel, etching, and others. He often combined them into one work. He used canvas, burlap, muslin, linen, gauze, cardboard, metal foils, fabric, wallpaper, and newsprint.[52] Klee employed spray paint, knife application, stamping, glazing, and impasto, and mixed media such as oil with watercolor, water color with pen and India ink, and oil with tempera.[53]

    He was a natural draftsman, and through long experimentation developed a mastery of color and tonality. Many of his works combine these skills. He uses a great variety of color palettes from nearly monochromatic to highly polychromatic. His works often have a fragile child-like quality to them and are usually on a small scale. He often used geometric forms as well as letters, numbers, and arrows, and combined them with figures of animals and people. Some works were completely abstract. Many of his works and their titles reflect his dry humor and varying moods; some express political convictions. They frequently allude to poetry, music and dreams and sometimes include words or musical notation. The later works are distinguished by spidery hieroglyph-like symbols. Rainer Maria Rilke wrote about Klee in 1921, “Even if you hadn’t told me he plays the violin, I would have guessed that on many occasions his drawings were transcriptions of music.”[54]

    Pamela Kort observed: "Klee's 1933 drawings present their beholder with an unparalleled opportunity to glimpse a central aspect of his aesthetics that has remained largely unappreciated: his lifelong concern with the possibilities of parody and wit. Herein lies their real significance, particularly for an audience unaware that Klee's art has political dimensions."[55]

    Legacy

    Art does not reproduce the visible; rather, it makes visible.

    —Paul Klee.

    As Klee learned to manipulate color with great skill and passion, he became an effective teacher of color mixing and color theory to students at the Bauhaus. This progression in itself is of great interest because his views on color would ultimately allow him to write about it from a unique viewpoint among his contemporaries.

    Klee influenced the work of other noted artists of the early 20th century including Belgian printmaker Rene Carcan.

    Composer Gunther Schuller also immortalized seven works of Klee's in his Seven Studies on Themes of Paul Klee. The studies are based on a range of works, including Alter Klang [Antique Harmonies], Abstraktes Terzett [Abstract Trio], Little Blue Devil, Twittering Machine, Arab Village, Ein unheimlicher Moment [An Eerie Moment], and Pastorale.

    Another of Klee's paintings, Angelus Novus, was the object of an interpretive text by German philosopher and literary critic Walter Benjamin, who purchased the painting in 1921. In his "Theses on the Philosophy of History," Benjamin suggests that the angel depicted in the painting might be seen as representing progress in history.

    In 1938 Steinway pianos manufactured the "Paul Klee series", to commemorate the way in which Klee married the art forms of music and visual art. Only 500 pianos were produced in this limited series, with Vladimir Horowitz being one of those to purchase the piano. Paul Klee described the series as "a great honour and privilege. This tribute has affirmed my life's work."

    In the late sixties, the psychedelic nature of Klee's pieces was revived musically by a group, including jazz composer Chuck Mangioni, The National Gallery which in 1968 released the album, "Performing Musical Interpretations of the Paintings of Paul Klee" with music and lyrics that are appropriately surprising, strange, and delightful.[56]

    Today, a painting by Paul Klee can sell for as much as $7.5 million.

    Zentrum Paul Klee in Bern, Switzerland

    A museum dedicated to Paul Klee was built in Bern, Switzerland, by the Italian architect Renzo Piano. Zentrum Paul Klee opened in June 2005 and houses a collection of about 4,000 works by Paul Klee. Another substantial collection of Klee's works is owned by chemist and playwright Carl Djerassi and displayed at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

    Footnotes

    • a  Paul Klee's father was a German citizen; his mother was Swiss. Swiss law determined citizenship along paternal lines, and thus Paul inherited his father's German citizenship. He served in the German army during World War I. However, Klee grew up in Berne, Switzerland, and returned there often, even before his final emigration from Germany in 1933. He died before his application for Swiss citizenship was processed.[57][58]

    Citations

    1. ^ Julie Rauer (2006). "Klee's Mandalas". asianart. http://www.asianart.com/articles/klee/index.html. Retrieved on 2008-02-10. 
    2. ^ Gualtieri Di San Lazzaro, Klee, Praeger, New York, 1957, p. 16
    3. ^ Susanna Partsch, Paul Klee, Taschen, Köln, 1993, p. 8, ISBN 3-8228-0299-9
    4. ^ Partsch, p. 8
    5. ^ a b Partsch, p. 9
    6. ^ Edward Kagan, Paul Klee at the Guggenheim Museum, Rizzoli, New York, 1993, p. 54, ISBN 0-89207-106-0
    7. ^ Partsch, p. 7
    8. ^ a b Partsch, p. 10
    9. ^ a b Kagan, p. 22
    10. ^ Enric Jardi, Paul Klee, Rizzoli, New York, p. 8, ISBN 0-8478-1343-6
    11. ^ a b c Partsch, p. 11
    12. ^ Jardi, p. 9
    13. ^ a b c Kagan, p. 23
    14. ^ Jardi, p. 10
    15. ^ a b Partsch, p. 12
    16. ^ Partsch, p. 17
    17. ^ Jardi, p. 12
    18. ^ Partsch, p. 18
    19. ^ Jardi, plate 7, 9
    20. ^ a b c Partsch, p. 20
    21. ^ Partsch, pp. 24-5
    22. ^ Kagan, p. 33
    23. ^ Kagan, p. 35
    24. ^ Partsch, p. 27
    25. ^ Kagan, p. 27, 29.
    26. ^ Partsch, p. 31
    27. ^ Reproduced alongside Gerg Traki's poem in Zeit-Echo 1915.A reverse ekphrasis.
    28. ^ Partsch, p. 35
    29. ^ Partsch, p. 36
    30. ^ Partsch, p. 40
    31. ^ Partsch, p. 44
    32. ^ Partsch, p. 47
    33. ^ Jardi, p. 17
    34. ^ Jardi, p. 18
    35. ^ Partsch, p. 48
    36. ^ Jardi, pp. 18-9
    37. ^ Jardi, p. 20
    38. ^ Jardi, p. 22
    39. ^ a b Partsch, p. 73
    40. ^ Partsch, p. 55
    41. ^ a b Jardi, p. 23
    42. ^ Partsch, p. 64
    43. ^ Kagan, p. 42
    44. ^ Partsch, p. 74
    45. ^ Jardi, p. 25
    46. ^ Partsch, p. 76
    47. ^ Partsch, pp. 77-80
    48. ^ Partsch, p. 94
    49. ^ Partsch, p. 80
    50. ^ Kagan, p. 23
    51. ^ Partsch, p. 84
    52. ^ Kagan, p. 26
    53. ^ Partsch, pp. 58-60
    54. ^ Jardi, p. 8
    55. ^ Paul Klee 1933 at www.culturekiosque.com
    56. ^ Vinyl LP, Philips catalog number: PHS 600-266.
    57. ^ Fayal, M.: Paul Klee: A man made in Switzerland, swissinfo, 25 May 2005. URL last accessed 2006-09-05.
    58. ^ Zentrum Paul Klee: A Swiss without a red passport. URL last accessed 2006-09-05.

    References

    • Paul Klee: Catalogue Raisonné. 9 vols. Edited by the Paul Klee Foundation, Museum of Fine Arts, Berne. New York: Thames & Hudson, 1998–2004.
    • Paul Klee: 1933 published by Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, Helmut Friedel. Contains essays in German by Pamela Kort, Osamu Okuda, and Otto Karl Werckmeister.
    • Reto Sorg und Osamu Okuda: Die satirische Muse – Hans Bloesch, Paul Klee und das Editionsprojekt Der Musterbürger. ZIP Zürich 2005 (Klee-Studien; 2), ISBN 3909252079
    • Some poems by Paul Klee ed Anselm Hollo. London 1962
    • Kort, Pamela (2004-10-30) (in English). Comic Grotesque: Wit And Mockery In German Art, 1870-1940. PRESTEL. pp. 208. ISBN 9783791331959. http://www.frontlist.com/detail/3791331957. 
    • The Diaries of Paul Klee 1898-1918 ed. Felix Klee Berkley, University of Calafornia 1964
    • The Thinking Eye,The Notebooks of Paul Klee ed Jurg Spiller New York 1964
    • Otto Karl Werckmeister: The Making of Paul Klee's Career, 1914-1920. University of Chicago Press, 343 pages, 125 halftones, 1984, 1989.
    • Marcel Franciscono: Paul Klee: His Work and Thought. University Of Chicago Press, 406 pages, 1991, ISBN 0226259900.

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    From Today's Highlights
    December 18, 2005

    A line is a dot that went for a walk.
    - Paul Klee

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