Thursday, May 5, 2016

PAUL KLEE L’IRONIE À L’ŒUVRE



6 APRIL - 1 AUGUST 2016

The Centre Pompidou is proposing a journey through the work of a singular figure in modernity and one of the 20th century’s most iconic artists: Paul Klee. This is the first major in France since the 1969 exhibition at the Musée National d’Art Moderne.

Featuring two hundred and thirty works loaned by the Zentrum Paul Klee in Bern
and various major international and private collections, this retrospective casts a fresh look
on Klee’s work. It sheds light on the way he used irony through an approach originating in the early German Romanticism, consisting in a constant shift between a satire and the affirmation of an absolute, finite and infinite, real and ideal. In this respect, Klee’s use of irony is inspired by the philosopher Friedrich Schlegel: «Everything in it must be a joke, and everything must be serious: everything must be offered up with an open heart, and profoundly concealed.»
This new approach also explores Klee’s relationship with his peers and the artistic movements of his time.

The exhibition is divided into seven thematic sections highlighting each stage in Klee’s artistic development:

I. Satirical beginnings

After his studies in Munich, Klee spent the winter of 1901-1902 in Italy. Faced with the grandeur
of Antiquity and its Renaissance, the young artist became aware of his own place in history: that
of an imitator obliged to continue a now outmoded classical idealism. His solution was satire: a modern mode of expression that could assert both high ideals and a critical view of the state of the world.
« I serve beauty by depicting its enemies (caricature and satire) », he wrote in his diary.
Based on this dialectical inversion central to Romantic irony, Klee began producing essentially graphic works, in which he expressed his often scathing thoughts on relations between the sexes, his relationship to society and his position as an artist. It was also a time when he experimented with techniques, trying out reverse glass painting and exploring plastic forms. This period culminated in the illustrations 
for Candide ou l’Optimisme by Voltaire, a writer much venerated by Klee.

2. Klee and Cubism

Klee discovered Cubism in Munich in late 1911, and a year later during his stay in Paris. From then on, the formal inventions of Cubism nourished his pictorial explorations, often in a dialectical way. Whilst using a prismatic vocabulary, Klee’s childlike drawings are nevertheless an ironic representation of the Cubist decomposed figures that he found deprived of all vitality. In the series of watercolours painted during his formative stay in Tunis in 1914, he introduced effects of distance – for example by leaving
the vertical bands of white paper that corresponded to the marks left by the elastic bands he used when painting outdoors. This distancing technique was also evident in his highly singular approach, where

he cut up finished compositions into two or more parts, turning them into independent works
or combining them differently on new supports. Here Klee asserted a creative impulse whose roots lay paradoxically in the act of destruction.

3. Mechanical theatre

At the end of the First Wold War, Klee’s work began to feature the imagery of mechanised figures. Inspired by his experience in aviation maintenance, Klee transformed birds into planes, often in attack formation. He started using oil transfers: an indirect technique that depersonalised the lines of the drawing. The aesthetics of the machine were then much in vogue in Dadaist circles, from Francis Picabia to Raoul Hausmann. Klee’s contact with the Zurich Dadaists revived his interest in the representation
of machines and equipment, and the effects produced by their mechanisms. As a teacher at the Bauhaus, he began to create hybrid beings, half-human, half-object. Through mechanical simplification, he used the motifs of automatons and puppets to condemn the loss of vitality and the narrowing of inner life brought about by industrial rationalisation, asking ironically « When will machines start bearing children? »

4. Klee and Constructivisms

The new watchword proclaimed in 1923 by Walter Gropius, the founder of the Bauhaus («Art and technology: a new unity») marked a turning point for the school. Klee was highly responsive to it.
He then embarked upon a tightrope act, seeking a balance between his intuitive approach and the new contemporary dogmas. He took up certain aspects of modernist expression such as the grid, while sidestepping its rigidity. His paintings, structured by squares, in turn evoked musical rhythms, stained glass painting, tapestries, multi-coloured flowerbeds and aerial views of fields. The Bauhaus’s move
to the modern city of Dessau in 1925 further induced the school’s movement towards the use
of photographic techniques, ardently supported by its new teacher, László Moholy-Nagy. Klee reacted in his own way: rational aesthetics acted as a foil, enabling him to assert his antagonistic position more firmly. In his view, «laws should only provide a basis for self-fulfilment.»

5. Backward glances

In his last years at the Bauhaus, Klee began to multiply references to different epochs of the past. Inspired by his travels and the many books and articles he read on the subject, he introduced pictorial elements reminiscent of ancient mosaics, Egyptian civilisation and figures and signs carved on the walls of Palaeolithic caves. The prehistoric dimension in itself was a recurrent component in his imagination: fossils, caves, mountains in the process of forming, primitive plants and animals, sacred stones, undecipherable inscriptions on rocks and such like all allude to the past in varying degrees. Klee used imitation as a method of appropriation. The reproduction of the effects of time on both the object (wear and tear, mould, erosion) and its content imbued his works with a sense of parody. While Klee drew
on the repertory of signs produced by «primitive» or non-Western cultures, he was only imitating
the principles of their original structure.

6. Klee and Picasso

Picasso represented a particular challenge for Klee. His work dialogued with the Spanish artist’s with particular intensity at two periods in his life: at the beginning of his career in around 1912, and above all during the 1930s, after he saw the 1932 retrospective at the Kunsthaus in Zurich. Here Klee discovered Picasso’s « Surrealism », particularly his large paintings of female figures and his biomorphic metamorphoses: two new directions that powerfully influenced Klee after the Bauhaus period, and stimulated the work of his final years.
This confrontation was nourished by the publication of numerous articles on Picasso in reviews such as Les Cahiers d’Art, to which Klee subscribed. After his first visit to Picasso’s Paris studio in 1933,
the two artists met up at Klee’s house in Bern in 1937. That virtually silent moment revealed the tensions between these two giants of modernity. Their dialogue was imaginary, made up of appropriation
and opposition, of secret admiration and critical irony.

7. The crisis years

Hitler’s coming to power in 1933 marked the end of Klee’s career in Germany and forced him into exile in Bern. He responded with a series of drawings that transposed the country’s predominant angst into violent cross-hatching. Von der Liste gestrichen [Struck from the list], a self-portrait in the form
of a pseudo-Cubist African mask, treats Nazis politics with irony by parodying their own criteria

for exclusion. Klee liked to counter terror through a childlike, playful iconography, where signs are transformed into stickmen dancing not in joy but in fear. These figures may well allude to the general physical training encouraged by the Nazis. Their dislocated appearance reflected another source
of anxiety for the artist: the serious illness that was beginning to stiffen his bodily movements. In 1935, Klee developed scleroderma, a wasting disease that gradually mineralised his body. As a result,

he simplified his graphic language, which now expressed contemporary suffering – both humanity’s and his own – with elementary force.

Exhibition catalogue

by Angela Lampe
A publication with 312 pages and 300 illustrations, featuring new articles by internationally recognised Paul Klee specialists. Format: 23.5 x 30 cm. Hardback. Price: €44.90.

From his satirical beginnings to his reinterpretation of Cubism, productive exchanges with Dada
and inversion of the Bauhaus dogmas to his final years of crisis, throughout his career Paul Klee endeavoured to assert total freedom with regard to the modernisms of his time, readily taking casting an ironic eye on their principles and disrupting their systems. The retrospective staged by the Centre Pompidou Paul Klee takes a completely new look at his entire output through the prism of Romantic irony. This richly-illustrated catalogue contains contributions from leading specialists on Klee and sheds light on the subversive character of his work.



PAUL KLEE Paul Klee, Ohne Titel (Zwei Fische, zwei Angelhaken, zwei Würmer  Pen and watercolour on card
16,2 x 23,2 cm



PAUL KLEE Verkommenes Paar
Couple mauvais genre, 1905 Reverse glass painting
18 x 13 cm
 Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne 
 © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Candide, chapitre 16:
Tandis que deux singes les suivaient en leur mordant les fesses, 1911 Pen on paper on card
12,7 x 23,6 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne
 © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE (Lustig?) [Lachende Gothik] [(Drôle?) [Gothique joyeux]], 1915
 Watercolour and pastel on paper, metallic paper borders on card
 © Adagp, Paris 2016
28,9 x 16,5 cm 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York © 2016. Digital Image, The Museum of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence
 © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Vorführung des Wunders
 Présentation du miracle,1916 
Gouache, pen and ink on prepared fabric, mounted on card
29,2 × 23,6 cm
The Museum of Modern Art, New York
© 2016. Digital Image, The Museum
of Modern Art, New York/Scala, Florence
 © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE
 Angelus novus, 1920 
Oil and watercolour on paper on card 31,8 x 24,2 cm
 The Israel Museum, Jérusalem 
 © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Landschaft bei E. (in Bayern) Paysage près de E. (en Bavière), 1921 Oil and pen on paper on card
 49,8 x 35,2 cm
 © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Bild aus dem Boudoir
 Image tirée du boudoir, 1922 Copy in oil and watercolour on paper on card
 33,2 x 49 cm
 Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE (Jugendlicher) Schauspieler=Maske [Masque de (jeune)=comédien], 1924 Oil on canvas on card nailed to wood 36,7 x 33,8 cm © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE von der Liste gestrichen Rayé de la liste, 1933 Oil on paper on card 31.5 x 24 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne Donation Livia Klee  © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Der Schöpfer
 Le Créateur, 1934 
Oil on canvas
42 x 53.5 cm
 Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE Dame Daemon 
Dame Démon, 1935
 Oil and watercolour on prepared hessian canvas on card
150 x 100 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE Tänze vor Angst
 Danses sous l’empire de la peur, 1938 Watercolour on paper on card 
48 x 31 cm
 Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE
 Insula dulcamara, 1938
 Oil and colour glue paint on paper on hessian canvas
 88 x 176 cm
 Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne© Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Liebeslied bei Neumond 
Chant d’amour à la nouvelle lune,1939 Watercolour on hessian canvas
100 x 70 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE
  La Belle jardinière, 1939
 Oil and tempera on hessian canvas 95 x 71 cm
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne © Adagp, Paris 2016



PAUL KLEE Übermut
 Exubérance, 1939
 Oil and colour glue paint on paper on hessian canvas
101 x 130 cm 
Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne  © Adagp, Paris 2016




PAUL KLEE Angstausbruch III
 Explosion de peur III, 1939
 Watercolour on prepared paper on card 63.5 x 48.1 cm Zentrum Paul Klee, Berne  © Adagp, Paris 2016