Saturday, May 18, 2024

Artist of the Day, May 18, 2024: Kurt Schwitters, a German painter, sculptor, designer, and writer (#2027)

Kurt Schwitters (1887–1948) was an important early 20th century German painter, sculptor, designer, and writer. Born in Hannover, Germany, he studied at the School of Arts and Crafts there and continued on to the Dresden Academy. At his first exhibition in 1911, his work showed strong Post-Impressionist tendencies. However, as World War I engulfed Europe, his work shifted dramatically, incorporating a darker Expressionist style, as well as elements of Dada. He began showing works at Der Sturm, a famed Berlin gallery, and contributed to their eponymous magazine. He befriended Berlin avant-garde artists Raoul Hausmann, Hannah Höch, and Hans Arp.

Though never officially part of Berlin Dada, he was heavily influenced by these artists and the emerging Dada style. Schwitters began making collages called Merz, which were made from found objects and would become his most well-known works. In these works, Scwhitters used magazine clippings, waste material, and other recycled items in an attempt to make sense of the rapidly changing and fragmenting post-war world.

In 1919, Schwitters fame began to rise; he had his first one man show at Galerie Der Sturm, and published An Anna Blume (1919), a Dadaist mock-romantic poem. As Germany stabilized during the intra-war period, Schwitters began to travel, hosting lectures and discussions about his work. In Hannover, he transformed parts of his home into a network of interconnected grottos and secret compartments filled with clothing, human hair, and other collected objects. He called this Merzbau, an installation reminiscent of his Merz collages. During this period, Schwitters also founded and directed a successful advertising and design agency.

With the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, Schwitters fled to Norway in 1937. There, he built a second Merzbau that was soon destroyed by a fire. When the Nazis invaded Norway in 1940, he left for England, where he would remain for the rest of his life. He was interned on the Isle and Man with many other German intellectuals and artists, but he continued to perform and create art with the limited supplies available.

Following his internment, Schwitters lived in London for a brief period, and eventually settled in the Lake District in the northwest of England. He painted realist landscapes and portraits late in his life to support himself, while continuing to produce collages.

In 1947, he received funding from the MoMA in New York and began work on the Merzbarn, an installation in an old barn that was left unfinished upon his death. Many artists have cited Schwitters as highly influential, including Robert Rauschenberg, Damien Hirst, and Ed Ruscha, among others. Critics also point to his wide-ranging work as prefiguring Pop Art, Happenings, Multimedia Art and Postmodernism.

© 2024. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Kurt Schwitters or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Kurt Schwitters
 Cover of Anna Blume, Dichtungen, 1919
 Merzbild 1A (The Psychiatrist) 1919
 Merzbild Rossfett, 1919
 Schwitters, The Grave of Alves Bäsenstiel, 1919
 The And-Picture, 1919
 Forms in space, 1920
 Merzz drawing 85, Zig-Zag Red, 1920
Merzz. 53. Red Bonbon, 1920
Merzz 163 with Woman, Spraying, 1920
Merzz, 1921
Santa Claus, 1922
Something or other, 1922
Abstract Composition, 1923–25
Man soll nicht asen mit Phrasen, 1930
Maraak, Variation I (Merzbild), 1930
Kleine Dada Soirée, 1922
Merzbau, 1937
The spring door, 1938
 Merzbild alf, 1939
Untitled (D'Cily)1942
Untitled (White Construction) 1942
Relief in relief,1942-45
Difficult, 1943
 Hitler gang, 1944
 Heavy relief, 1945
 Mother and egg, 1945-47
For Kate, 1947
The Holy Night by Antoni Allegri, known as Correggio..., 1947
Still life with wine bottle and fruit, 1948

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