Klee
Klee
Klee
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KLEE
GUALTIERI
DI
SAN LAZZARO
>
^Md
.4
Klee
2011
http://www.archive.org/details/kleestudyofhisliOOdisa
Klee
A
STUDY OF
HIS LIFE
GUALTIERI
DI
AND WORK
BY
SAN LAZZARO
STUART HOOD
NEW YORK
FERNAND HAZAN,
(g)
FREDERICK
I
PARIS, 1957
UNITEDSTATES OFAMERICA
IN 1957
BY
57-1
232
PRINTED
IN
Contents
The
Arab
Little
page
The
Artist
Paris
page
Alone
page 33
page 46
faire*
and Cubisni
page 67
page 79
Africa
War page
87
page
'Creative Confession*
The Bauhaus
page
116
page
K, K, Gesellschaft
lOS
page 127
149
Crystalline Painting
page
Return to Berne
page 183
I6S
Demons page
page 225
page 235
Saint
page 243
Biographical Notes
197
page 209
An Unorthodox
14
page 22
Mastering Life
'Bonne a tout
page 257
page 281
page 282
Bibliography
page 282
page 284
page 287
page 303
WE ARE GRATEFUL TO
M.
AND THE
FELIX ICLEE
IN
THE
WORKS OF
AND PARTICULARLY TO
M.
MLLE ANGELA
MR.
AND
F.
C.
M. SIEGFRIED
BERNE.
ROSENGART OF LUCERNE,
SCHANG AND
MR.
BERGGRUEN
The
Little
Arab
The son of a Swiss mother and a German father, Paul Klee was a wonderful
epitome of the physical and psychoboth his
indeed
almost impossible to be more German and yet more Swiss than he. But
some distant trace of the Mediterranean had left its mark on him both
logical
parents.
characteristics
It
would be
of
difficult
WOODCUT.
1909.
LANDSCAPEfrom
sketchbook,
biographers
family on his
his
mother's side is suspected of North
African connections
he was himself to
become African. From Africa came the
mystery, the incantation which seemed
to be the source of his last works.
His biographers tell us that his
mother, Ida Maria Klee, came from
Basle, which is at oncethe most bitingly
witty and the most sensual of Swiss
cities. His father, Hans, on the other
his
c.
A common
passion
ARCO SOUTH
boy's
Klee became
humour
in
TYROL.
of
Hans
The
his son.
Mathilde,
child of the
whose
marby
portrait
though
Heredity,
personality
made
to
him.
his
own
an artist of Klee.
In
VIRGIN IN A TREE.
-1903.
Elector (page
6).
in
enthusiastic
letters
This sarcastic
first
playfellow
man
the
first
admirer of
was
really
know from
and
left-handed
that
painted
with the
left
we
He drew
hand but
AND
VASES.
PORTRAIT OF MY FATHER.
work he
The
left
hand.
were
merely
is
PORTRAIT OF
poet
in
him.
guardian
angel,
the
Christmas-tree.
Htp?
particularly
which
fond
men and
processions
of
animals
in
alternated.
to reappear later
certain
humour, too,
in
these early
ability
worthy of
mature
artist.
One remembers
!N
a real letter
from
THE QUARRY.
a fount of type.
Many
It
is
years
flies
loved to
draw and
paint
cyclamens,
not
studies by an
with a precise feeling for colour.
When he left school after taking
his final examination, he inserted an
advertisement in the student magazine,
precious
preliminary
artist
Mary
Magdalenes, of
taken from the
notebooks of a sixth-form pupil".
Madonnas,
girls,
of
brigands,
etc.,
Madonnas,
Mary
into
his
Magdelenes
fj">j>
BIRDCAGE
ON THE COLUMN.
lo
knickers. His
seven
was
first
love
a little
at
Italian
the age of
girl.
Some
a cousin
stayed
from Basle
in
whose ignorance
'^
..
r
\
"^:/
\
^i%
.^k-'
fi
HANNAH.
New
York.
were
his
great
passions.
He wrote
him
we
have
and
produce works which even today are
worthy of our admiration.
It was natural, therefore, that having
passed his examinations with no great
distinction, he should decide to study
painting seriously. In 1898 he left for
Munich. He was nineteen years old.
said
to express himself
YOUNG WOMAN
12
IN
as
artistically
A DECK CHAIR.
iiu^'/'^ C:^^7.v^#
HUMAN WEAKNESS.
13
IMA'^'.-^-'-jJjp'^y^ff
Ijil
I'O
MUNICH THE
STATION.
1911
provincial.
Of the three
years which
Paul
Klee
we have only
together with
some rather insignificant works. Klee
was not to find himself until he
had calmed both his senses and his
imagination, thanks to the beneficial
Academy under
the
artist's
influence of
Stuck,
account
Lily, a
young
pianist
become
who
his
wife.
accommodating,
14
of them
heart.
It
a decisive
was
at
in-
Munich
confidence in himself,
every inclination with a
subtlety, with a pedantry even, worthy
of a psychiatrist. Music, literature and
painting attracted him equally. But he
did not leave it to chance to decide
whether he was to be a musician,
writer or painter. He chose painting
because he had a definite feeling that
painting, more than music or poetry,
would allow the full expression of his
personality. "I shall make painting take
analysing
steps forward", he
in
Berne.
which
he
imposed
on
himself
had
when
"Wait".
While he waited for
woman
Lily,
who was
to
poor girl
enabled him to satisfy the most urgent
promptings of his sexual curiosity. She
was far from being his ideal woman
be the
in
his
life,
an imaginary creature to
given the
at least a
name
of Eveline
whom
he had
One
difficult
obstacle.
Kandinsky was to
And
say, for
Stuck as
he too was a
7i/r
(CANDIDE),
15
^^
pupil of this
was
He consoled
himself
in
Lily's
com-
tracted
him.
Tolstoy's
Resurrection
girl
whom
he already con-
SKETCH OF A STREET
16
IN
A TOWN.
ANATOMY OF APHRODITE.
17
1f/'i
ASa?
4X%
HEADS.
'
my
round the
lips.
than
Many years
life."
But
later
he kept
his
his
ambitions were actually more
modest. Gradually his erotic fancy
seemed to be assuaged. In his heart
there was a growing need for a "noble"
love. At Whitsun, which he was spending with Lily's parents
her father who
was a doctor had treated him for a
nervous disorder of the heart some
months previously he was able to
win a first but decisive victory over the
young
wait
pianist.
prepared,
the
necessary
maturity.
in
to
reach
his
full
artistic
Berne in the summer of 1901 and prepared to set out for Italy with his friend
Mailer, whom he had known since he
was six, and who had been with him in
his
years
in
first
\,
A FRAGMENT OF EDEN.
fil^>ldjcchn ^i^fT^
1913.
F.
C.
Schongs
Collection.
New
York.
19
-^
"i
fi
i'
LITTLE PORT.
20
LITTLE VIGNETTE
FOR EGYPT.
21
K^
TOWER
BY THE SEA.
Mastering Life
Klee-Stiftung. Berne.
effects
duced
Women
had
apart,
and
with
no contact, Paul
them
Klee's
he
Italy
is
entirely composed of
museums. But whereas
Stendhal abandoned himself to his imlike
Stendhal's
theatres and
Klee
severely
observed
and
which that enthusiasm had proin his mind. Paul Klee was in-
terested principally
his
How Became
I
Paul Klee.
Munich, and
as later in
Germany and
Egypt, he
In Italy, as in
Paris, Africa,
antiquity,
of confronting the
adds
he
immediately,
'"'any
own
artistic
epoch.
And
October
panied by
1901
his friend,
Hermann
In
in
Genoa was
in Italy.
His
Haller,
Milan, he ad-
his
Some months
visit
Sistine
23
zoo.
24
On
But the
primitive arts would always be dear to
his heart. If the Laocoon annoyed him
the Belvedere Apollo fascinated him. It
if
his
ideal.
shell-fish,
own
sensa-
them to
Almost
25
CATS.
Klee's
all
'personages',
anemones and
rium
at
shell-fish
like
in
the sea-
the Aqua-
removed
vation.
worked
in
Rome was
on squint Chimneys.
called Moralizing
The work
is
value-
the
enchantment of acclimatization.
We
fulfilled
all
Klee's poetry
lies in
magic limita-
what we might
26
call
work was
less
In
but
in
the
title
CHILD.
27
<-
UNDER A BLACK
STAR.
/<Y*
f'^
t^o
V'
surrounded
by women,
he
had
the
~ia.el
1920.
one of his
childhood dreams. From Munich Lil/
wrote to ask his impressions of Roman
women. Paul was not a new Stendhal
severe
tour
W^
7,t^'-^> >
officers
of
Italy,
filled
him
triumphant
with en29
MEDITATION Self-portrait.
thusiasm
perhaps
minded him of
because
a girl with
she
re-
whom
he
was
dispelled
in his
some
heart which
days
later
by
another Parisian actress one who did
not come from the legitimate stage,
la Belle Otero. She had a poor voice
but posed delightfully and was a woman
in every inch of her body. Even Clo de
Merode, whom he saw some time later,
could not make him forget her.
Music continued to excite him but
30
1919.
still
totally
Rome
he saw an
in
spite
of
its
Forain
fascination,
1919.
Institute, California
rz^^
seemed
'
attracted
by
Donatello,
absence.
In
31
^
u
>
Between
he made
So
much must be recognized, although it
is difficult to share his enthusiasm for
his early etchings, in which he unfortunately lapses into Teutonic grotesque. The engravings, and later the
'sous-verres', gave him the opportunity of grappling with the problem of
line, with which one day he would be
1902 and
1906
To master
able to express
all
his
in his art.
poetry.
33
how
learned to understand
covered
a piece of glass.
He
his
own
in Italy)
with
his
undergone profound
modifications.
From being tenderly lyrical it had be-
come
wrote
Diary.
merit
the
Virgin
in
severity
Tree,
Beast,
A Man
Connedian,
Woman
and
is
still
like
Two
other to be
Klee
nourished
his
own
whom
sense
of
JiW
(whom
ier
300 marks,
of the
days
has
painter,
high
figure
for those
attempt
In
at flight.
ticipate his
own
occasionally
synthesize
in
in
taste
the
his
much
'sous-verres'
etchings and
an-
very
this he did
as
'sous-
Nod-
he did
not admire),
by
whose works
face
One example
is
IJ
o
c.
37
MIRACULOUS LANDING.
The theme of
father and son suggested a whole series
of works A Father with his Son, A Father
seen by his Son, A Father blessing his Son.
But they were not as successful as he
wished and he destroyed them. "Only
his taste for variations.
the
titles
remain",
philosophically
in his
he
summed up
Diary.
He was
Amiet
that his
38
man
1904.
invented
clear
up
in
summer
the
of
precarious construction."
He made some
before 'Hansel and Gretel', saw Sudermann's plays before seeing Ibsen and
we
tion, as
trips to
Munich to
the mili-
to
mouth before
attempted
where the
in
vain
Heilbut
arrange an
critic
to
it
flying visit
V?
\^k
^m
::>^
sf
^v
:^
1.^^.
DRAWING FOR
"PLANTS, EARTH
39
of his
exhibition
some published
in
various periodicals.
passion
for
her.
He had
had
not have
been so sure of himself. Unfortunately
the girl's father was not very happy
about their relationship and the two
young people had frequently to meet in
secret.
vice,
received from
On
along
31st
with
Bloesch
his
friends
Moilliet
and
one of his
short, mere
at last to realize
The journey
when
It
was
shown
in
Italy.
to a country which,
too much of a German, he
being still
could not but regard with an unconscious element of distrust.
He
visited
modern
town.
art,
In
the
40
BIRDS. 1923.
R.
41
l'Olympia
all
these
he visited.
His
him recognize
his
master.
The truth
is
of
talent.
In
Sisley
Carrire,
refined,
who was
Pissarro
dry.
closer to his
own
Cezanne,
until
whom
some years
DANCE OF THE
42
the
f^
^imSV
Collection, Lucerne.
43
a fever;
his
"Yesterday
pulse.
would have
intoxicated
which he
felt
some years
later, affected
him deeply.
He
was present
at
best musician
had ever lived) which was something of a fiasco, because Casals found
who
As
his feelings
became more
clearly
'1,'
live in a large
grew
town. "For
in
Lily,
him to
too,
it
will
We
I
in
his
five
,1
in
thousand painters."
'
',/:-'-:;-:--; ---ir-.
THE OPERA-BOUFFE.
44
'
a city of
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^HRb^?~
^^i^^^^^^^^^^i
^H
^^^^^^^^^HV^i^ ^^'
'
^^^P^^H'^'-i^lH^v^^
J! ^
3B,.^..3ip
^^p^^^ w?>?S-%^Hf
.
WtKmit-'^Mmtttltttm
SENECIO.
1922.
Kunstmuseum,
1
I
Basle.
45
Bonne
tout (aire
/v^tV
"In the
little flat
artist's son,
in
Munich," so the
Klee
Felix
tells
us,
"my
.'IT
that
same kitchen he
made me wonderful
mended. ...
toy
skill
In
trains,
a cardboard
railway
station
new
my
father took
me
In
the afternoons
to the outskirts of
the town
he, furnished with a folding
chair, an easel, a box of colours and a
with some of my
bottle of water;
I,
For the
toys.
whole family
my
summer
left
holidays
the
where
were reversed.
It
C.
46
Schong Collection,
New
York.
1925.
is
from
THE CHILD.
1924.
F.
C.
Schang Collection,
work.
in
came
his.
Yet
birth on 30th
complicated things,
Klee had had the good fortune to paint
the portrait of the son of a chemist
from Basle and that of Frau von Sinner
for 800 marks in all.
He was, besides, not so much alone
before
November
Felix's
1907
New
York.
was that
at
home he
Grohmann
rightly
authoritative
two
out
points
work on Klee
later,
that,
in
his
more
he immortalized
Bavarian State
is
art,
opposite
pole.
We
have
his
work
Italy.
48
Bad
initial
wait
discover
that architectural
sense
journey to
influences made the
young
we
to
artist lose a
his
number
of precious
CHILD.
were not entirely without their use, for they forced him to
think things out and ponder them
long. It is only in 191 I, in the illustrations to Candide (published in 1920),
that we recognize in him the great
artist he was to become during the
war. Yet from time to time there are
years, but they
It
his
a tropical
49
^T\^
HERON.
50
1924,
F.
C.
Schong Collection.
New
York.
AQUARIUM WITH
enemy, but
will
a force
absorb."
His
first
to 1912
years
were
in
Munich
from
pressionists,
1905
own
his
faith
impulsive,
more
in
is
^itr
53
%f
fct*^T^
ktSy^
to
Simplizissimus,
the
satirical review published in Munich,
which like the periodical Jugend
did much to help the spread of the
"Modern Style". He therefore offered
some of his drawings but they were not
accepted and Klee, in any case, refused
54
For
many
years to
come he
life
except
compromise with
this
to
his
refuse
conscience.
any
In-
some months
art in an evening
HERMITAGE.
The
and domestic
prevent him from
attending the school of Meier Graefe
the German critic who devoted himself
with exemplary ardour to defending
the French Impressionists in German/
and Karl Scheffer "to learn" as he
birth
worries,
said
did
of
Felix
not
55
And he
a model tragedy."
he hailed a master
Now he no
longer hesitated to admit that the
French interested him more than the
Germans. From Berne, Ernst Sonderegger sent him as a present an etching
but he
pathos
is
in
foreign to me,
is
is
burning
which
fire
is
suffering
of a star.
It
from the
frees
itself
through its works just before catastrophe overtakes it. A great tragedy
is evolving in him. a tragedy of nature,
concludes:
'Sezession',
that
rather than
in
van Gogh.
to get warm;
was a decisive encounter for
1908, he took the lease of a
Klee.
In
K9
/^ X 3
:^immmuic.
V-fi.
t;?w!Mv
-.^. ^>ayy-^gy
CAMP ROAD.
little
Studio
where he could
paint
in
It
justify his
long wait.
that
special
is
human body,
muscles and
anatomy
stated
that
he
in-
57
tended to paint:
figures.
He
(a)
space
and
(5)
his light
flat
washes on
in order
them
and shades.
line,
such importance
in
his
was
1911,
he
this state of
in
began
the
which
mind
that, in
illustrations
in
he
W^'^^^^^^rji^^-
i?0
-ffv
BLOSSOM.
58
to
^/r.
'%4f
;^/Pr
- ^-
^^tr
><y^
strate with
woman's
with
ness,
natural
inquisitive-
namely
Paul Klee
drew
in
>
mittedly
Vei>
which
landscapes.
Sometimes
his
line
is
still
hard and loses itself in confused convolutions. But the adventure with the
line has begun. The thoughtful selfportrait of 1911, however, is a considered and cordial act of homage to
the technique of van Gogh.
59
?'
61
^',/, '
''
^^,
NEIGHBOURLY
An
exhibition
in
IDYLL. 1926.
Switzerland
in
F.
C.
Schong Collection,
New
York.
1910
well received
well-framed sheets" did not pass unobserved. At Zurich one of his watercolours was bought for 200 nnarks. In
Berne, Frau Hanni Burgi decided to
start a collection of his works. Summoning up his courage, Klee wrote to
who
Lily,
who
had remained
in
Munich and
even
if
ended
unfortunately;
in
Winterthur
works.
Fortunately he was no longer alone.
little
circle of friends
had formed
The Zurich
painter,
Thomann,
invited
him to
once
Macke
join
'h
^^^01^
.^d
uJli.
who
1926.
Klee
went to and fro between them, showing them each other's work. After
Kandinsky, whom Klee met personally
in the autumn of 1911, other new
{friends came to comfort him for his
I
set-backs
j
of all. Campendone,
Jawlensky, Marianne von Werefkin and
Gabrielle Munter. All these artists
Shis
favourite
jlof
F.
C.
Schong
Collection,
New
York.
in
his
Diary:
and
study
its
is
own box
ought to be able to make
free fantasies on the plane of colour."
trate on the contents of one's
of colours.
In the same way his study of light prepared him for the no less important
meeting, it took place in Paris a few
months later, in April 1912 with
Robert Delaunay.
Kandinsky's
found
Klee
"bizarre". But after getting to
him personally he had great faith
Russian artist
who
"is
works
know
in
the
somebody and
63
1925.
in Art.
He
to
limited to engravings
in
64
March 1912.
At this point Klee had no suspicion
CHILD
he
preferred
thing
ON
THE
"^^'mikim^-:^ ^mmmii^.
ilSr
^^
^#
jitj\r^^6
'*y j-
1926.
-^(-tx.
F.
C.
^^-^ -
Schang Collection.
New
York.
im^
.<i.
Paris
and Cubism
1927.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Berne,
Klee arrived
in
Paris
on 2nd
Felix
with
his
grandparents
in
Their
first
week was
tirely to sight-seeing.
satisfy
her
curiosity
wanted to
which,
to
be
67
MATERIALISED GHOSTS.
68
"^'4
THE BIRD CALLED
long
visits
to the
Louvre,
the
Ind-
pendants.
It
Nth
was
that
in
Of
his
was not
Delaunay
tion of the
that
"Visited
Diary:
morning
in
his
Delaunay
studio."
in
He
the
says
69
with
ger,
whom
the
critic
who
had
already
shown
own
his
in
eventually
dedicate
In
himself entirely.
German
dealer,
AN
THE ORDINARY
OUT OF
1927.
period he found
centrate.
70
Lily
inevitably reveals
its
ridiculous nature.
BOTANICAL GARDEN.
71
SHIP M
72
IN
HARBOUR.
he condemned
in
quality.
Thus we read
"It
said
is
repose, but
that
I
should
the Diary:
in
demanded
demand
movement."
Ingres
like
to
our
is
Light
sensibility.
Without
visual
sensi-
bility
arises
from
is
reality
of
all,
since
it
comes to
us
from
contemplation of the
Universe. The eye is our most noble
sense the one which communicates
most closely with our brain. Consciousness and the idea of the living movement of the world is simultaneity."
directly
movement of
much newer."
colours
In
is
short the
something
two
artists
known
in
Sverin
he
Germany. With
had
daringly
his
Saint-
posed
the
74
1926.
cians
and
painters.
Klee,
who was
but
who
abstrac-
BIRD DRAMA.
1920.
New
York.
drawn
his
of Christian
if
he were begging
when
into geometric
drawings dating
1913, such as the Policeman in
are less important and in the
it
patterns.
almost joyfully.
from
Flight,
in
Zurich
forced
is
The
latter
Arp
illus-
greatly,
promised to suggest to a
another Alsatian, Otto
Flake, that they should be published.
Flake had a great deal of influence with
and
he
friend of his
from
Then he
sat
asked for
its
case,
down
his
began to
play.
news;. as he listened he
75
SEMITIC BEAUTY.
76
-'
'
CARNIVAL
his
he
noticed
IN
THE MOUNTAINS.
lay curled
recently,
f*
-pPIPV'
i'^
Arp
that
up on
related
Klee
was
who
had
factory
in
left
Switzerland
in
in
German
order not to
uniform. But
77
'
in
De
Chirico's
first
period, that
this,
In
Picasso,
who
the opposite
of
on
he
is
coups de foudre.
Finally,
is
extremely
the
Piper,
publisher,
gave
Klee
principal merit
one of the
first
was
his
show
more im-
portant event
soon
his
journey to Tunisia
desired them.
PORTO-FERRAIO ELBA.
78
is
overlooked them.
It
1927. Phil
Hon,
U.S.A.
early
had
1927.
F.
C.
Schang Collection,
New
York
Africa
Moilliet
who
in
one of
work
finally
his
Museum
to be hung
put him on
in a
Swiss
his road.
acquired
modern
museum
ingly
He
felt
in-
sleeping
in
79
new steamer
belonging
"My
"always
father",
felt
strongly."
Kairouan,
In
the
wrote
call
Felix
Klee
seems
to
have
BERIDE (AQUATIC
80
Klee,
re-
He had the
feeling that
he was re-
some
his
distant admixture,
For the moment, he forgets his highsounding statements about line and
simultaneous contrasts in order to
paint water-colours in which form is
almost an accident of colour. If he
thought of anyone in those days it must
have been of Cezanne, his true master.
But his colours, even if pale, arethicker,
the brush strokes broader almost
TOWN).
^~.*^.r:1/^'3;>|
^.;i.i;ti^
.,itriiwiiiii
LITTLE PICTURE
OF
ft/ii
m.
yt*J*:..w*i*-
Collection. Brussels.
^
Klee's poetry, which nothing would
ever be able to suffocate neither his
irony nor the dramatic pessimism of
his last years with its roots in illness
shores
again
DWARF WITH A
ROSE.
1927.
82
in his
mind
North
will call
me
in
low voice,
like
South.".
In
short, that evening Klee discovered his true vein of poetry. It was
as if something which was already
there, but repressed and cramped, had
suddenly been liberated, freeing his
imagination, which, even when forced
to conform to certain patterns imposed
by his sense of discipline, would remain
lively
were happily
"I
all
atavisms
his
reconciled.
need to pursue
me
possess
moment;
it.
know
that
it
will
the great
and colour are one. am a
for ever. This
is
painter."
In
emotion
inevitably
as
life,
in
poetic
his art,
precedes
plastic
expression.
The
actual water-colours he
brought
View of Saint-Germain
I), Motif from Hammamet (Cat.
(Cat.
were
3), Before the Gates of Kairouan
back to Berne
I
across
cupolas
which we
shall
come
later years,
in
parched
earth,
the
for
the
little flags,
cer-
feeling
ments of Arabic
a surprising
1
4), a play
We
we
find that
ORIENTATED MAN.
1927.
whom
Bonnard
said:
is
above
all
of
'feeling',
"He produces
is
in
the
his
departure.
83
SLIGHT
i.
84
DANGER AT
FULL
he
felt
alone
MOON.
in
in
Tunis, to
for
85
M!
RAIN.
War
side
refuge
If it is
true, as Carola
states, that
Giedion-Welcker
of the war, of
whose
useless horrors
in
confesses,
was the
In
source of ab-
real
straction as far as he
was concerned.
is
comfort
in
lies
a pleasure
in
world
memories
lived intensely.
of
days
but
in
full
in
which
recognize
in
sight of
poems".
The war cut Klee
off
new
87
TT"^"'VSl\
'
"
" i|
.....
TSTW?;-
HMi-liMfmit
M^
J> ..r;.i^',"<>i..>
y>*
I.
f^rir'
*'-"l^
,.,^41*
5 r,.;uu <ty
*'lilUi^..--^<i
ill
COAST OF PROVENCE.
1927.
F.
C. Schang,
New
York.
/t*w*
in
may seem
^mv
fmmWm^mkB
after
companion,
Louis
Moilliet.
war within me
carried this
have
"I
for a long
granted
passport
by
the
military
authorities to go to Switzerland,
where
sincerely.
All
his friends
were
called up,
like
whom
Marc,
he found
in
Switzerland.
The
drew
89
'..;*r
x/
Uu.fiiMj^
V .;i--
91
DESERT MOUNTAINS.
92
in
colour, which he
his
com-
left
with
them
Thus
draughtsman
could study
painter.
Klee's flat or
by Rilke and
in
his
friend,
Lou Albert-
Warmoes
has
recently
stated
that
at his leisure.
as follows:
still
which
feel
the influenceofKairouan,
During these war
know.
93
for
it
is
know
a question of faith to
reality
to
and
own
What
debris.
is
astonishing
self
artistic creation.
man
territorial
as far
Klee,
who
down
subject
arts,
of which
as
ing
yet
the
know
imagination
in
nothing,
is
'
'
Military
gets
life
for a soldier
forces
at
on
the
ranges.
Otherwise his
war must not
in
known
exhibitions.
He worked
un-
workshop. He painted
box into
the
lensky's Variations.
n March 9 6 K lee too was cai led to
the colours. At almost the same time
I
WAVES.
94
his
7/>j
THE RENDEZVOUS.
1929.
an
exhibition
of his
work
in
Berlin
F.
C.
Schang
Collection,
New
York.
his part.
in
workshop
sum thanks
his dealers,
Walden and
LITTLE
PORTRAIT OF GIRL
IN
YELLOW.
1925.
F.
C.
Schang Collection.
New
York.
cial
success.
identifiable
influences,
reveal
new
richer
96
in
haze can be
colour than a sunny day; but
light of a slight
^\
CHILD
AND DOG.
97
K,
1929.
F.
C.
Schang Collection,
New
York.
moons and
Certain
mark
stars,
signs
forced
like
arrows and
the
themselves
suns.
exclamation
upon
him
98
he
owed
to
much
either
dis-
artistic
(page
17)
but
works he is forced
to rediscover those signs which drift
through his mind and which, like the
pine and the moon, have become his
even
in his
abstract
De
FAMILY WALK.
variations.
He
knew
that
the
saying
to
young Cocteau:
Etonne-moi." Klee accepted the challenge and no one will probably ever
succeed in being the source of more
100
between
1915 and
1918 he rethought
Cubism
1930, Neo-division-
ism.
The question
is
whether these
're-
nearer
creation"
is
poetry, as
in
his
work.
But we must not see in him as JosephEmile Mijller justly remarks, "a mere
case of inspiration. He is not the
irresponsible voice of something which
shakes him and dominates him in spite
of himself. He is at the same time
1929.
field
c^'
part
precisely
another
of
in
in
his
work
has
consisted
intelligence."
of his water-
is
due
and
had
had
and
Nor
always cramped.
colourists of
of the
it
is
He was
make
to
is
his
musical composition
a brief melodic
merely
phrase.
In
music.
a motif,
a picture
Klee
to
these almost
musical
measures
White
Domes
plastic
as
in
(1914).
space
into
-iV
already present
in
is
above
all
indestructible symbols
is the disquieting
Canary Magician painted in Munich in
divide
is
symbolical
in
his
later
Mozart, and
works,
Hindemith and Schonberg.
If we take the works painted during
the war and add the landscapes from
the years 9 9 to 920, on them there is
"all Klee". In Rhythm of Autumn Trees
we find once more the horizontal
bands of the 'ideograms' which allowed
first
In
compositions of
1918, With the Eagle (Cat. 24) and The
Descent of the Dove, Klee the romantic
in 6/ue Roof and Orange Moon and in The
the
Weimar
;jii!"
*'?.
.^^
s'f!:v
i&.
^u
STUDY.
102
FLAGGED TOWN.
?^il;
'mfr
:>'S<-
.^^;^:?^
'Creative Confession'
K lee's
Creative
was
Confession
pub-
1920,
of
poets,
a score
and
painters
musicians;
on
Drawing
and on
Art
in
general.
essay
Klee's
begins with short
The
tion
it
first
is
publica-
sentence
up the reflections and
a
which summed
ble."
But
these
reflections,
as
the
from the
experience of Klee the draughtsman.
The nature of graphic art easily tempts
one to abstraction and rightly so. The
purer the draughtsmanship that is to
say, the more stress is laid on the
formal elements which are the basis of
the drawing the more inadequate is
the framework for the realistic repreoriginal title indicated, flow
sentation
of visual
objects.
reveals
But this
a truth
now to
'
The
105
>'
m*'.^K-r'-r>r>i..
""UT*
^'
'.fi^W^^^I
..^^I3~
<')iJL-^!6-.-J'>'-^'^-^^
*
>
,^,
Ma^Ha^^^^^CiJf:
/*
'
Mrs
^fti_bt.ift-f ^-'4-
-K'Ia
T
FEAR BEHIND THE CURTAIN.
The element of
surface,
for
produced
An example
is
a cloudy,
107
LEAF
FROM THE
TOWN
RECORDS.
1928.
Kunstmuseum,
Basle.
in
valley
meet
people.
home with
element.
spatial
We
Basketmakers
coming
wheel). They
their cart (a
writes:
"All
kinds of different
lines.
striped
itself,
gaining
strength (dynamic)."
next
relationships
always movement."
carding
108
the
He
begins by dis-
traditional
distinction
GIRL
Chris.
between the
WITH DOLL.
1930.
spatial
demands time.
shifts
to
Similarly,
produce
when
surface.
a line
So too
1930.
script
is
man who
looks at
sums up
essential
work
pictures
is
of the
art
registered
109
'
/
T-r-r^-.
^v
^,_J.
'
-.
-V:
''"^
>-.
,,i
:
->
_
--i
i
t
'%':.:
rrmrm
II
Ill
expressed
that,
in
relation
is
to
the
only an isolated
equilibrium.
way on the
Coming back
some
concrete
to earth he gives
examples.
To
the
-^
-s*'-^t
"^
SPECIAL DOOR.
12
//
.,.^.1
BRIDGE.
agglomeration
114
of
various
stages
of
repose.
its
structure,
its
fruit,
away miserably."
It
is
thanks to this
^tt
AN
116
HABITUE.
The Bauhaus
Thus
to
1920,
in
come
to the Bauhaus
Confession,
by Reiss of Berlin.
In
the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius
proposed to create a new corporation
of artists and artisans. Abolishing all
barriers between themselvesthey were
to collaborate
in
the construction of a
artistic and
Architecture,
painting
were to form
sculpture
a
and
harmonious
unity.
RICH LAND.
17
1927.
The
fine
lar dialectic.
work
Bauhaus was an
advanced school of form and as such
left its mark on a period of extremely
fruitful experiment; round about 1925
evolved a style which was everyit
where much admired and which bears
its name. There is no doubt that the
Bauhaus contributed greatly to the
evolution of both Klee's and Kandinsky 's thought, to the formation of their
118
of Picasso.
short essay published by Klee
reality,
the
in
collection
1923
art."
In
is
standing
Wege
his
art.
In
it- the
title
is
(Approaches
to the study of Nature) we once
more find the intimate tone of the
des Naturstudiums
Creative Confession.
artist the dialogue with
remains a sine qua non. The
artist is a man, himself nature and a
part of nature, within nature's space."
This axiom expresses a general and
"For the
nature
On
this point
sign of
"The
'!'
subject,
The
that
it
aspect
optical
What
of
things.
SIGNS.
"The
art
of
con-
out
made
and
impressions
neglected.
"One
by
images
was
underestimating
phenomena,
is
of the natural".
method
increased
carry
it
the
advances
knowledge of
further. "The
artist of
119
*fer
CHURCH AND
CASTLE.
more
rich
among other
Our knowledge
a star
stars."
of the individual
scope and depth and
does not stop at appearances.
know that there is more to it than the
external aspect. Man dissects the object
object grows
in
We
and
as
interior.
20
'I'
is
encour-
there
is
of our comnnon
1929.
earth,
runs through the static zone and produces static forms, while the upper
approach runs through the dynamic
zone.
from that
This
is
somewhat obscure
liberty
full liberty,
through movement.
meet
in
121
these
nature'.
his
in
in
1924,
to his pupils.
It
is
more
a little scholastic
undoubtedly
it
is
were
doubtful whether
schematic
and
the
achieve
new
natural
he creates a
arbitrary
work
work or he
order,
of art.
Then
participates
CLOISONNE.
122
and
the
In
all
his
pupils
the special
periodical
October
1948,
one of
his
ex-pupils
extraordinary
knowledge of form, of the techniques
admits
that
"Klee's
1^1^^^
GENESIS OF THE PHYSIOGNOMY.
on
of drawing
ordinarily
possibilities,
tolerant
man,
own
field,
Klee had
little
this
in his
capacity for
pupils'
own
work seems
creations.
ageless,
like
DOWNWARDS.
an
ability which
Klee pospurest form. For Klee was
not only a great innovator who strove
to see behind things, he was also
reality
sessed
in its
an exceptionally gifted
observer and
realist.
"Another of
his
powers
it
plastic
allowed
expres-
-Klee
disposal
Here
his
to
very
his
limited
starting-point was a
pupils'
degree.
know-
he gave to
ledge of graphology;
his
compositions was
nature and to his
own laws, which were not however
transmissible. So his pupils went astray
and lost their necessary link with the
execution
of
subject to his
his
own
."
.
125
"~1
MIXED WEATHER.
26
GROUP INTERLACED.
Line, Tonality, Colour
deal
princi-
famous
in
Jena in
January 1928 on the occasion of an
exhibition of his works. The theorist
in him had a powerful antagonist
the
lecture
given
at
mystic.
To
them
death
in
his
reconcile them,
to unite
published
in
On Modern
Art,
1945,
it
workshop."
There must be some ground com-
painter's
placed
being
else,
in
consulted,
He
in
it
as best
he
this
New
York.
The
sap,
compare
to
can.
person,
differs
who
never succeeds
in
perform-
"who
is
sufficiently well
'orientated'
in
this
orientation
among the
life.
eye.
this
powerful
upsurge
he
transmits
TABLE OF
COLOUR
(IN
GREY MAJOR).
FIGTREE.
In
the world of art,
born again but is of necessity
deformed, since it must submit to the
specific dimensions of the plastic work
of art. These dimensions are, in the
first place, more or less limited formal
factors such as the line, light and shade,
and colour. The line is the most simple
of a
picture.
nature
is
1929.
element
F.
C.
Schong Collection.
of
measurement
all;
New
York.
relates
only
to
Tone value
or, as
it is
it
somewhat
we
The
third
13
a difference
and
tions.
formal
Colour
is
secondly, weight,
primarily
because
it
quality,
has not
purely dimensional.
This leads us to the
first
type of
enumerated above. It
here that the centre of gravity of
of elements
is
all
power
But
sions.
field
if
of form
one's orientation
is
in
the
When
failure.
the
we know from
associative qualities
in
nature. These
the
work
are
the origin of the heated misunderstandings between the artist and the public.
Whereas the artist is entirely con-
if
his
The
r-./.
LATE.
32
1929.
F.
C.
Schang Collection.
New
York.
AU*
HEAVILY PREGNANT.
1934.
himself:
"Uncle or no uncle,
on with
my
construction.
must get
This
new
is
from
^' -1-
ILLUMINATED LEAF.
own
134
face,
each
its
organized form
its
i-W^^ggp^
is
why pictures look at us, joyfully
or severely, intense or relaxed, in
comforting or forbidding mood, in
sorrow or
smiling.
in
motion.
If
a picture
and looks
at
ease, that
a construction
is
in
element
systematic manner.
vertical
visible
and
35
which
is
Romanticism emerges
in
a peculiarly
emotional form. This form of expression tries to soar higher and higher, to
triumph more and more over the
weight and bondage of terrestrial
things.
very
coincide
with
accurately
between
distinction
classical
the
and
romantic.
We
call
can use a
a 'con-
it
word
rich in
how
the
deformations
of
natural
first
reason is that he
does not attribute to these forms the
decisive importance which the 'realists'
give them. He does not see in these
finished, completed forms the essence
of the creative process of nature. He is
perhaps, without being clearly aware
arbitrary
forms.
WARNING.
of
is
sometimes
less
rigid
atmosphere
where
(as
in
swimming
dominating
verticals.
It
136
is
world
first attitude.
The deeper
philosopher.
vision
penetrates
more
inevitably he
the
This 'pose'
it,
His
image
into
things,
his
the
is
nature but
with creation's only essential image
'genesis'. Looking forward into the
future as he had looked back into
the past and attributing duration to the
process of genesis, he conceives the
daring idea that the process of creation
can today hardly be complete. He goes
MONUMENT
of
perfected
IN FERTILE
COUNTRY.
1929.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
iw^aiwawi,.
..
-Vi,;^jt;t
further.
He
if
we
different
will
again.
different
creative activity.
A mere
glance
show
suffices to
in
us
the microscope
we
not
know how
they
like
that
in
an
would exclaim
in
avant-garde
anger:
review,
"Are these
ON AND
38
IN
THE LAKE.
DOUBLE
FACE.
139
"W'^'^mmm^mm^mm
ACROBAT.
140
-^'f^'^m^
AND
SHALL SAY.
only
in
The true
One
.
141
GENTLE DRUMROLL.
at
the source of
secret key to
all
all
is
creation
kept?
where the
142
closely
to the externals of
nature, of daily
life
to stay
at
ground
WORLD HARBOUR
143
is
we
not
and
permits
us
works of
to
art or
judge their
quality.
rigour
in
in
the plastic
their handling.
arts,
and
Klee refers
An
CLOUD ABOVE
144
TREES.
145
side.
But
We
The
artist
is
among men,
isolated
of indifference;
is
adds.
That
dream, but
will
it
is
remain a
good to imagine the
certainly
worse
tied
lecture
his
in
objects,
Universe.
still
lack
supreme power;
MORE WILL
146
BE
for the
MARCHING SOON.
of
be
relation
at
called
Rights
relation to
We
in
or
Klee's view
might
Declaration
in
when face
work
by numerous bonds. The Jena
he finds
not
possibility.
We
have
beginning at the Bauhaus.
begun with a community to which we
can do no more."
give all we have.
the object sometimes of hostility
colours.
we
made
of the
human
sort
of
Artist,
society, but
the
very
heart
of
the
ROUGHHEWN
HEAD.
1935.
F.
C.
Schang
Collection.
New
York.
47
2^^53^
EXPRESSIVE LYRE.
148
HALL OF SINGERS.
K. K. Gesellschaft
evening,
When,
in
November
who was
1925,
Otto
Ralfs,
an enthusiastic admirer of
which set
itself
obtaining for
its
149
1 1^
^mW
CONFUSED
walls.
of Frau
violin
50
laboratory.
In
the middle of
it
there
He spoke
of his
paintings
had to do it
with great simplicity:
"
like this so that the birds could sing.'
in
one of his water-colours
In fact
'I
dated
1922,
Modern
now
Art,
in
New
the Museum of
York, he had
she
151
work,
delicious
tones.
all
in
beak it
the art dealer, Flechtheim,
a
well-known Berlin
Dessau,
In
transparent
In
nnoved
in
who owned
gallery.
1926, the
some
time.
although
the
artists
and
their
families
52
FRUIT.
153
of these years,
exciting
of
most
the
Klee
his
fertile.
life
She
maharajas.
The two
EMIGRATING.
lived
through
on
154
families
Felix,
often
took
spent the
in
1926
Elba,
Florence,
1927
and
Brittany
in
1928
and
1928 the K.
Italy
Pisa
he
was
Corsica.
K.
again,
visiting
and Ravenna.
In
in
In
France,
December
Gesellschaft provided
the
BARK CULTURE.
'
155
Picturesque
write to
scape
Lily:
"I
[Monument
am
in
painting a land-
a Fertile
Land,
end of
cliffs
his
in
life.
It
Chekhov's
Russia.
experiment
staging
156
made
his first
opera
Hartmann.
his
friend
of
Kandinsky had designed the scenes,
which were all abstract and geometric
and thus went clean against the character of the music which was undeniably Impressionistic. But although
pictures
^'=^Fv^
K.
ladies sat
with
Mussorgsky's Pictures in on Exhibition,
which Mussorgsky had composed in
1874, drawing his inspiration from the
in
Y:^
HARBOUR AT
The two
V'..
.'.!**.*' !* *
^^^:
! ..V, *'*t***vv."iWi;
*4f !<*#
t (1
EMACHT.
his
collection, his
journeys to
Sicily
memories
and
Egypt
57
DRAWING FOR
158
"PIERETTE".
Academy at
"Wedined
in
CIRCUS.
a producer
he had studied production at the Bauhaus was away for
as
professional
reasons.
We
sat
there,
The
years of
many
life
Nina Kandinsky
throats.
fallen
The two
Kandinsky.
with
artists had been brought together by
life and by their careers. Daily contact
ill
Russia
159
mK A>V>:<
THE
comment
160
to make:
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
mental
fundamentally
different concept of the world. In the
one it was analytic and lost itself in a
confusion of meanings, allusions and
symbols. In the other it was synthetic,
expansive and source of radiation.
apart
pointed
to
X
:'At^
7t-
^\
/\
!\
ct.
GARDEN GATE
M. 1932.
R.
being reduced to
absurdity and deformed in order to
make of it something else. Everything
It
is
perpetually
faceless powers,
itself in
161
CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUND.
1937.
ideograms,
accordance with
the painter's wish, it is in order to
educate him by means of an askesis,
which is perhaps derived from ancient
the only trace of the past in the
rites
master of absolute art and which is
intended to teach him to dispense
game
graffiti;
nature
with
its
62
is
it
dispenses
whether
it
If
it
is
in
with appearances.
"Kandinsky's work does not relate
anything, nor does it evoke anything.
63
abstraction.
careful
"In
one
Kandinsky's
strict
formations
To
were to
imagination,
be
final
festivals
caprices
of
producof the
invention
DARING.
64
spelt out
no
no
sign. In
detail,
his last
great hasty,
his
eyes
no unevenness,
works everything
He draws only
sign.
summary marks,
his
skeletons,
cipher."
GARDEN RHYTHM.
large
Crystalline Painting
large surfaces
We
The
works are
small in dinnen-
in
which
work measures
only 191"
26.". It
was
is
by
feet
In spite
disposal
over three
just
feet.
Dusseldorf,
Weimar,
Dessau
was
he
still
and
cabinet
painter.
In almost all the works he painted
between 1920 and 1923 the graphic
element predominates.
Klee,
who drew
65
MONOLOGUE OF A
166
KITTEN.
1938.
SCENE WITH
pupils as
if
poetic
apart)
century".
Will Grohmann has classified the
works of the period under discussion
as follows: "There are those which
have their place at the centre of
167
-J>t!'**-
/ ;>-
y^->r-r
^i:c^.,v,v4,.y V
POLYPHONY.
168
1932.
Basle.
his
on
and
activity
the
which
those
lie
the former,
Klee's attitude to the universe finds
periphery.
symbolical
In
expression.
phenomenon
The
resists analysis.
pictorial
One
can
by
with other
works or by tracing the course of
the artist's development. One cannot
separate subject or theme from the act
of genesis or from its formal development. Taken as a whole, these works
comparing the
pictures
all
it
applicable.
One
if
that
term
is
it
is
less a
ques-
nature.
We
himself does
might
call
them
as
he
crystalline.
sense emerge from interwoven elements and formal signs, which have a
certain depth of meaning but
do not
peripheral
those
category
pictures
fleeting
study
Nature or from
we must
which
of
life
deal
place
with
phenomena from
and which have,
as
things
in
totality,
and
concept of totality applies to
all
his
work.
"This classification holds good for a
period often years; but in Dessau the
paintings in the third group are already
on
dividing lines
or
of values.
we
In
indistinct.
in
method
also
as
but
are
Where
of their
spirit.
the depths
different
picture
spirit
still
its
we
find
compensations in
which give the
powers,
true value."
belongs,
vibrate
high notes.
in
When
one of
saying:
was
he
his
complimented
on
works,
"The
Klee parried by
miracle of this little
painting
is
New
York.
15?%
ANIMALS
IN
THE PADDOCK.
1938.
F.
C.
Schang Collection,
New
York.
which
mark the
artist's
last
period.
It
was only
at
Germany
the end of
his
long
mastered
the problem of colour, he returned to
the problem of materials, which he
had faced and successfully solved in the
'magic squares' of the Weimar days.
The supreme beauty of the 'squares'
is due, in fact, to the austere density
of the pigments and the wonderful
resonance of the harmonies, which
contrast with the mathematical clarity
of the design. The latter may be immobile, as in Table of Colour in Grey
Major (page 30) in the Klee Foundation
or shot with light, the source of all
stay
in
that, having
171
movement,
1930.
F.
C.
Schang
works is
on which
his subject
dered, and
in
is
graphically ren-
transparency
gleaming quality, in the 'magic squares'
is a noble medium. So too it was in the
1938 pastels. Klee's mysticism and
sensuality fuse perfectly in these sub172
Collection,
New
York.
thus
Kairouan
(the first example is dated 1922) the
proud statement he made there:
"I and colour are one." That is to say
he rediscovered that poetry in the
painters
greatest
justifying
LAGOON
eight
of
his
time,
years after
Collection, E>er
i
]
mummmmmff
1
.1
Ijll(<|ili
^:f'
mmnmm
fe
.m w iwnmim i^nt
ii
ii
ACROBATS EXERCISING.
1938. Felix Klee Collection. Berne.
him
at
nosity of a mosaic.
The works
174
effects
his
verres'.
Man
SHIPWRECKED.
1938. Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
painted
painting.
his
sheet of paper
as
a stage
numerous.
the
175
MODEL OF A FLOWER
176
VASE.
1930.
Herman Rupf
Collection, Berne.
OPEN.
in
Man
sliouting
in
Klee's
work.
He
stages
enchanted
as
well.
177
OUTBURST OF
FEAR.
Dream
178
SUCCESSFUL INCANTATION.
179
again
Islam
partly
owing to
heredity,
his
towards
work
Klee's
by
attracted
strongly
once
BARBARIAN CAPTAIN.
pi ritual
it.
by
astonishes
the
variety of
its
by its
otherwise only poetry and music have
touched, by its sensibility and fantasy.
Klee's
musical.
fantasy
But
beyond
is
it
is
qualities of Klee's
upon
themselves
modern
whom
artists,
work which
force
attention
large
drawn
have
resources.
doubt
all
of
number of
upon
its
rich
only
achievement.
ORGELBERG.
80
1932
->
^y^ys^.^^K
-M
^
'i^'
,,,,,.,,.
.ir
^^i
a-""!
^c^H>V/Y^'^>-v^^^
//
# a4
Cl//g
ARCHITECTURE
182
d'O
a 0^'
FALL. 1938.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Return to Berne
ances
who were
painting.
One
with
and
publish ten entirely different volumes
of
entirely
reproductions.
'Klee'
its
is
texts
different
as vast as
The phenomenon
it is complex
and
"We
Grohmann
at
continues,
his
in
the
right
"for
they
as he said
sell them, because
formed part of his equipment. To him
Grohmann,
"to
just
able.
time,"
interested
came
"I
embrace
it
in
its
inextric-
totality
and
multiplicity."
'
183
DOCUMENT.
Y-
in 1954.
184
work
common'
he wrote one
modesty, the
memory of hours passed together
hours like
rises up in my memory
his paintings, full of sweetness, tranquil
gaiety and spiritual intensity. One
'in
day with
his
as
habitual
'What
we were
a nightmare' he said
a great deal of
'publisher',
construction.
"A
when
"It
is
initiates.
in
New
aspects of his
it
was
work were
always emerging,
functions.
first
Greco, for
El
example, whom he would have collected, he said, had he been a millionaire; Rembrandt's drawings and Islamic
ornament. But here too Klee limited
himself to one or two hints. One never
preferences
he
'When,
felt
him
the
art
in
in
'allusions'.
illness
off some
Way.'
185
SCHOLAR.
186
SNAKE PATHS.
happy.
me shortly
drawings.
He
studio.
in
Hence
his
ALMOST A
FIGURE.
saw
his
188
PATHOS.
189
YOUNG
TREE (CHLORANTHEMUM).
of music.
In his
work we
ated. Will
Grohmann was
invited to
me
in
Germany
AMATEUR DRUMMER.
of Klee's work; but the great retrospective exhibition was not held until
1935.
Klee
had
arrived
in
Berne
un-
after
Diary:
all,
once written
"What would
be
in
his
without
Germany?"
Rolf BiJrgi went north to remove the
works which had been left in the
191
BLACK
SIGNS.
and
world-wide fame.
Studio
artist
Lily
of old
in
his
She
days.
the
in
experience
as
an
authorities
different
however
to the
Grohmann.
Convinced that he would never be
>
POISON.
'93
?^^^^^
^.^
'
,-<:(..
JKB
e-
BROKEN MASK.
able
One
picion.
councillor
opposed
it
we
DIANA
IN
Many
195
/-Iff
NOT
96
PLEASED.
LITTLE
BAROQUE
BASKET.
Demons
When
still
at least in his
mindand
with bringing
epoch
in his
life.
197
199
HOW
LIKE
AN ANGEL.
his
are
successful
favourite themes:
200
thingtothem.
But
signs
in
that
of the
same
conflict
which was to
in
two com-
Head (page
147) and
is
a sculptural
FORGETFUL ANGEL.
form,
firm
classicism;
and
the
geometrical
latter
Expressionist work.
to
be
hesitating;
The
in
its
decidedly
artist
seems
but Expressionism
It
is
difficult
to say
Certainly
it
his
dulcamara (Cat.
the humour of the saxophone.
disenchanted
140)
Insula
201
THE
Klee was
ill
WAY OUT AT
LAST.
which are
later
become
at first
luminous but
sombre and
increasingly
thick.
In
1937 and
last
his
own
PICTURE OF A PARK.
203
DOUBLE ISLAND.
204
VIOLIN
but
increasingly
It is
beating
These
drum
'signs'
like
imitate
his
Drummer.
Islamic
script
outline of a
human
AND BOW.
figure as in
1939.
Pomona
(page 247).
The graphic Expressionism of 1937
pictures
some
are
barbarous,
do not express
the extreme agony which we find in
the last works of all.
In
1939, feeling that the end was
near, he gave up even the short drives
in an open carriage which Rolf Burgi
had persuaded him to take. That year
some
two
thousand works.
on the second floor
of a small house in the Kistlerweg
in Berne. In front of the house there
he
painted
He was
living
205
was
tree
little
the
garden
faithful
with
pine
which
The
pine
had
pictures painted
corpus of
symbols.
(Cat.
works
lay
said
that
other again.
206
in
1940 occupy
Woman
In
153)
in
the
work.
his
National
in
and
Double,
in
Costume
the two
so much
find in
but
1939
in
also
reminds
one of Arp;
become
Klee.
Only
Picasso,
in
the
Klee
EGYPTIAN
WOMAN.
207
Saint
(Cat.
149)
it
now
is
have
useless
in
the
to
eyes
look
of
for
is
Mussorgsky
ROSINANTE'S GRANDSON.
208
recall
have
Flower-girls
the
last
years of Titian,
in
whom
young man
His
last
work
of
all
still
life
which
whom
hands. But he
TWO
FRUIT LANDSCAPE
in Berne,
felt
in spite of his usual
calm and impassiveness that he was
somewhat upset when he spoke of the
latest display by the Swiss Press. The
great exhibition of his last works in
I
II.
express himself
in
monumental
lan-
NAVIGATIO MALA.
looking at the
problem
solely
live in
permission
to
He
to
grant
was
to
die
210
even
"Our
from
authorities
dialect
to become
to
more
in
Germany
was
never
He
told
me
in fact,
a tragic explanation, to
which
fully for
What
eat.
as
integrate
work and
it
daily
energies
many
and
constant
last
years
all
completing
SCYLLA.
of his pictures
inexorable
both
struggles,
as
we
was
threat.
physical
and
man
of great silences.
"That day
time an
the phases
and all the varying expressions of this
product of genius.
was attracted by
the task of transmitting my own
experience of an art born of so much
I
felt for
the
life.
his
first
all
silence
which
spirit'
of his
and
meditation
an
art
in
conquered by the
(the title given by Klee to one
earliest drawings) and in which
'suffering
is
211
NEWLY
the
artist's
through
inner
LAID
life
'consoling
OUT GARDEN.
was expressed
symbols'.
But
in
collective history of
at
establish
his
the
relationship
between
artistic
One
reality in
the press
said, but to the very
which they were rooted.
sublime type
impertinently
of. art'
had experienced
of the war.
in
as
these troubled
The dominating
aspects of my task seemed to me to be
twofold: to make Klee's personality
days
212
life.
an artist
who
213
GROUP OF
214
SEVEN.
FRATERNITY.
the grotesques of
Christian Morgenstern to James Ensor
and Goya, who has played a very
special part
through
modern artists."
Then there came
point
the
painter.
quite
Delaunay,
awakening
of
stimulated
who was
his
Diary at Kairouan on
Klee
the
by
Robert
a decisive influence
many
of his
16th April,
one ...
that sharp turning-
new
am
a painter."
direct experience of
Giedion-Welcker
Carola
continues, "Klee's world is no longer
grotesque but mystical an intellectual
trend which affected both Germany
and France in the twenties and found
expression not only in painting but
"After
colour",
this
also in poetry.
common
It
was a phenomenon
to which
to Europe; one
Klee's art contributed its
own
vital
215
FURNISHED ARCTIC.
216
above
all
painting,
in
in
space.
Here we
new mode
of expres-
which embraces
find an entirely
all
sion
We
mystique
Motorel of
du
Frre
Jacob.
"The Bauhaus
in
burlesque
et
Max
it
of theoretical
is
reflection
the
and
study
Kandinsky's,
structive on
among the
modern art.
Albrecht Durer,
seeker.
it
writings
What
is
most
in-
Klee,
like
a thinker and
interest
Bauhaus period.
tensions
217
EXOTIC TEMPLE
218
ANOTHER CAMEL!
1939.
F.
C.
Schang
Collection,
New
York.
219
/
GREEN ON GREEN.
to arouse a
new
1938. Dr.
feeling of space, to
perspective
'ubiquity'.
into
Pictures
completely
like
new
Highway and
like
the
characters
of
CALIGULA.
1936.
221
There
his
philosophical
mind could
conceived
with the utmost simplicity and embracing both the present and the most
reveal itself
remote
in visible signs,
past.
Pictures
like
Insula
new
worlds,
point
bring his
life
VALKYRIE.
223
TREE IN THE
224
TOWN.
EVENING
IN
THE SUBURBS.
On
including
"You
will
see
that
Hermann
Rolf Burgi
Rupf,
"the most
silent
to a nursing home in
Muralto-Locarno. Paralysis was approaching the heart. In order not
to upset him no one talked of the
war and they kept from him both the
exceptionally
transferred
On
exceptional
of
modern
artists
has
who were
close to
precious
harvest
life.
225
the fruits
lament
of his
new
signs of a
maturity the
first
Now we
must
flowering.
double
loss
our
human
Full Stop.
his life,
in his
patient, submissive
life.
However
hear
have
seen
Klee's
last
works.
We
AND HER
"Klee's
last
It
is
the
ENEMY.
SPECTACLES
IN
A TANTRUM.
227
A CHILD'S GAME.
to
human
internal or external,
tangible
symbols.
forms,
All
of
all
those per-
beings,
of
in
whether
the language of
tangible,
legible
them!
Everything
everything in-
and visible;
and invisible; all organized
creatures, from man to the lowest
external
ternal
228
WANTS TO GO ABOARD.
in
worlds,
we know
let us
take those
our means of
transport on earth, on water or in
the air, then we will see on what
affectionate terms he was with all
objects familiar to man. Similarly we
could list all the phenomena of our
earth and its landscape the totality
best, a house,
229
of meteorological
phenomena
we
of the
should be
behind us,
launch out into the realm of the stars.
"It was in intermediary zones that
Klee found his true climate: the intermediary state between night and day;
between things constructed and those
which grow naturally (for which Klee's
symbol isthegarden); the intermediary
zone where the inorganic mutates into
the organic, from plant to animal, from
animal to human being. This series of
gradations Klee did not look upon as
a progression
for him it was a path
which led as straight and as naturally
this earth and, leaving
it
far
THROUGH
230
POSEIDON.
in
one direction
as in
"Perhaps
cally
it
is
in
the
field
human psychology
New
York.
of specifi-
that
Klee's
ANTIQUE FIGURE.
231
art
richest.
is
It
is
an art which
knows
tion, flowering
who comes
so close to whatever
living
is
is
to say to
the
silent,
"It
only
is
if
we
are
capable
of
between experience of
distinguishing
reality
that
is
and
we
Schlosshalde
Klee's grave
from
his
is
in
inscribed
Berne.
an
On
extract
Diary:
cannot be grasped
"I
for
Cemetery
am
as
much
at
in this
world,
home with
away."
232
WITH THE
TWO
LOST ONES.
233
BIEDERMEIER-FRAULEIN.
234
'^^/\
.{r-7^
HE
ROWS
DESPAIRINGLY.
An Unorthodox Saint
Mondrian's
music
and
mathematics.
Admittedly Kandinsky also opened
up a new world to the arts and Mondrian has brought us his absolute
reality. But if the latter's 'truth' is
too objective, the former's is too
individual. Kandinsky rarely allows us
to enter his world and we still have no
real desire to enter Mondrian's. It is
from the outside that we admire both
poetry,
solar
human
more
universe
stellar
and
the
microcosm
of
Kandinsky.
Certain philosophers maintain that
is poetical but absurd
as
Klee's world
it
would indeed be
succeed
tence.
If
235
POOR ANGEL.
of
his
genius,
that
of science.
science
and
236
For
is
if
renounced
would inevitably
its
to
attains
revelationary
truth
an
not,
however,
art
replaced
intuition,
it
function.
Einstein,
who,
like
'delirium
Klee,
was
possessed
by
same opinion.
if
you like, a
is,
Klee's world
primitive one a world of caves, but
of stellar caves, which open up a new
INSULTS.
1940. Klee-Stiftung,
Berne.
237
may
technique is
never an end in itself. It is the very
essence of the painting. Even his
humour, which to begin with was the
mainspring of his art, in the years of
maturity is only the spark from which
refined
it
be,
his
symbols
familiar
sensibilities, as
the growth of
Western
our
to
when he meditates on
a tree or on man with
would be
his
work is born.
The question remains whether the
in
writings
including
the thou-
meet
plastically
in
to say,
is
more
realizes
the
us,
ambitions
Had he
of
Klee
limitations of science,
rejected.
His
artist's
his
still
without
thinker.
he would
all,
subject to the
nature
danger.
any
always
we admire
If
as a
more precious to
thought,
238
the
which he rightly
fortu-
them
have become
stars
never to
short,
In
realized
inevitably
two
only like
thinker he
us
when
hint
of
his
pre-
in
be an
his
water
gory.
When
faced
it is
in fact
a reflection
But there
is
that
humour which we
his
theoretical
humour even
of his
last
was the
last
in
days.
rarely find
in
There is
the gloomy pictures
writings.
The
life,
still
which
by way of
of humour over
of his works,
is
ways of certain
is
to decide
when
saints.
he
is
The
difficulty
ECCE.
Collection. Berne.
239
NAKbiJ
unorthodox
when
he
ON
is
THE BED.
theorizing
mystically or
gaze at
an
undisputed
worthy of our
What
does surprise us
for materials,
the
primacy,
ful
effects;
appears excessive
240
first
painting, in
which he has
is
his obstin-
work
fires
less
contemporary
and
no
unerring arrow.
This aspect of him as the apostle of
art
is
demands
its
own
materials
particularly
if
we
discovered.
sackcloth
with
colour can
move our
the
fragment
of
patch
of
right
much
feelings as
as a canvas painted in
in
each one of
Some
people
consider
which
us.
including
his
son
was
due to slow poisoning brought on by
Felix
that
his
illness
Will
Grohmann
the
of art
from
definition
his
youthful
paintings.
In
1913
#4
GLANCE.
241
was due
We
vides
with
it
mysterious
He
is
stantly
a painter
have to hand
learn to
know
plants,
we
if
Some
of his
able
as
embalmed
all
if
works are
petrified.
beauty.
set and
Theirs
immovis
an
Others belong to
power
of
&
242
wish to
f^^^
POEM
second
meaning.
Biographical Notes
SAILING SHIPS
KLEE Biographical
1879
18th
Notes.
who
Berne-Hofwyl,
The Klee
in
His father,
1880
MOVING GENTLY.
1876
is
family
is
music master
German;
^father
his
at
mother
Swiss.
his sister
Mathilde
born
settles in Berne.
1880
1881
Birth of Picasso.
1882
Birth of Braque.
1^84
1885
Birth of Delaunay.
Haller.
1887
1896
his
/'/
August Macke.
The two reviews jugend and Simplizissimus begin to appear
Birth of
in
Munich;
245
^>^^
dr
^^^^Vk
M m
&
<;
'
m^\
"'^^H
RJ
if
THE PARK AT ABIEN.
1898
1899
1900
246
they will spread the Jugendstil and publish drawings by Th. Heine, Olaf
Gulbransson and others, which will influence Klee.
Kandinsky, born in Moscow in 1886, and Javlensky, born at Suslovo in
1864, come to Munich and meet at Anton Azb's school of painting.
In October, Klee goes to Munich and enters Knirr's school of art. He once
more meets the sculptor Hermann Haller, whom he had known since 1886.
In the autumn he meets the pianist Lily Stumpf (born 1876), daughter of
a Munich doctor; she will become his wife in 1906.
In October Klee enrolls at the Munich Academy and joins Franz Stuck's
POMONA.
Studio; Kandinsky
1901
He
visits
Milan
(27th October-23rd
1902
1902
247
1903
In
Berlin Karl Scheffler and Casar Flaischlen found the review Kunst und
1903-1905
904
During
work
Goya
in
1905
He
visits Paris
May-I3th June).
Visits
the
1906
1907
He
sees
some
Impressionist paintings
in
Munich
gallery; he particularly
admires Manet.
248
November
birth
Sonderegger makes him read the letters of Van Gogh; shortly after he sees
two very important exhibitions of his work inthe Munich galleries.
The Bund Zeiciinender Kunstler, an association of artists interested in
drawing, refuses to make him a member.
never published.
He
Cubism born
1909
in its
in Paris.
He
He
The
1910
abstract composition.
In
Berlin,
Sturm.
The Manifesto of
Russolo) appears
1911
Milan.
249
Kandinsky, Marc, Kubin and Gabriela Munter leave the Neue KunstierThe first two work on a book which will appear in 1912 under
vereinigung.
the
title
in
It brings together fortythree pictures by Henri Rousseau, Robert Delaunay, Kandinsky, Marc,
Macke, Campendonck, etc. Klee is most impressed by Delaunay, who
exhibits five works, among them Saint-Sever in (1909) and La Ville (191 I).
1912
Klee participates
is
held
in
etchings.
From 2nd to
1913
1914
take part.
250
J^f
1/^
1915
Fi
Klee receives a
Sv\^itzerland
1916
251
1917
Klee
is still
he
employed
He
Herwarth
as
him
a flattering article to
in
the
Berliner E>rsencourie.r.
In Leyden, Theo van Doesburg founds DeStijI, the review of Neo-Plasticism,
along with Piet Mondrian, Vilmos Huszar, Georges Vantongerloo and
others.
1918
1919
The
architect,
Lyonel
1920
Feininger (born
in
Weimar.
in
1918.
His illustrations to Candide, which date from 1911, are published by Kurt
Wolff in Munich.
Another work illustrated by him Curt Corrinth's Potsdamer Platz
published by Georg Mller in Munich.
252
is
a monograph to him.
25th November he is invited to become a professor at the Bauhaus.
Klee leaves Munich for Weimar.
At the Bauhaus he begins v\^ith Formmeister (master of form) in a glass
workshop then in the v\/eaving school. Later he also teaches painting.
Wilhelm Hausenstein publishes his monograph Kairuan, or The History
of the Painter Klee and the Art of our Time.
On
1921
Neo-Plasticism.
at
the Bauhaus.
In
1922
becomes
1923
1925
summer on the
Hanover he
1924
in
visits
He
in
Raspail.
the
1926
253
Publication of the
first
number
until 1932.
1927
1928
Island, Syracuse,
Dessau.
the Bauhaus review he publishes Exact Experiments in the Reainn of Art.
Gropius and Moholy-Nagy leave the Bauhaus. The Swiss architect, Hannes
Meyer, becomes the new director.
Klee makes a journey to the South of France Carcassonne, Bayonne,
the Gulf of Gascony with an excursion to San Sebastian and Pamplona.
For his fiftieth birthday the Flechtheim Gallery in Berlin organizes a large
exhibition of his works.
Exhibition in the Galerie Bernheim Jeune in Paris.
Will Grohmann publishes a monograph in the Cahiers d'Art in Paris.
Oskar Schlemmer leaves the Bauhaus.
Klee spends some time in the Engadine and at Viareggio.
Another exhibition in Flechtheim 's gallery.
Exhibition in the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
He becomes a member of the committee and jury of the Deutcher KunstlerIn
1929
1930
bund.
The
Hannes Meyer
as
director of
the Bauhaus.
1931
On
1st
April Klee terminates his contract with the Bauhaus and accepts
there.
Among
1932
Bauhaus).
1933
254
255
Switzerland.
sister are
He once more
still
installs
himself
in
Berne where
his father
and
living.
1934
1935
1936
1937
1938
1939
1940
1942
halde cemetery
256
in
Berne.
Catalogue
of Principal Worl<s
2.
3.
Kunstlers.
4.
1903.
Komiker
I.
1904.
5.
6.
I.
Elfenau,
Lily
Klee.
Berne.
3.
The
6.
7.
1905.
2.
Two Men
Lily
Klee.
7.
mit
der
Giesskanne.
1905.
1905.
Higher Rank.
meet, each supposing the other to be of
4.
Artist's Sister.
Gartenszene
Drohendes Haupt.
Comedian
Garden
I.
5.
Menacing Head.
259
a'
ir
Y
I
8.
I.
13.
1909.
Motiv aus
Young
Hamammet.
13.
Motif from
1914.
1914.
II.
260
9.
View
Hamammet.
12.
14.
9.
Hommage
Head
of
14.
Hommage
Man
12.
Mutter und
Picasso. 1914.
young
of Saint-Germain.
10.
15.
Kind
191'
Stadtischie
10.
Darstellung.
Carpet of Memory.
Picasso.
15.
1913.
Representation of a City.
1915.
*'ii
^ilP
16.
Der Niesen.
&
17.
1915.
f,:^
Kakendaemonisch.
1916.
rna^.
<>
#1
.
Farbenwinkel.
1917
19.
20. Mit
dem
Halbmond
gelben
1917.
0A^wm
21.
Ab
evo.
16.
Colour Corner.
19.
The Niesen.
Composition
21.
Fest auf
12.
1917.
witti
Ab Ovo.
17.
Symbols.
22.
dem Wasser.
1917.
Kakendaemonischi.
20.
Festival
With
the
yellow
half
Moon and
blue Star.
on the Water.
261
23.
Einsiedelei.
24. Mit
1918.
dem
Adler.
191
r
i
HP^
25.
28.
26. Villa R.
1919.
262
29.
Hermitage.
Three-part Time.
28. Abstract
27.
1919.
1919.
23.
25.
:*".
with
26.
full
Villa R.
Moon.
24.
With
27.
ttie
Eagle.
29. Arrival
Letter
B.
I!
iiwiiH Lj^-i"^
!
y^ wfi
'
(ii^li
30.
Bob.
1920.
32.
^^S
34.
33.
Hngende
Fruchte.
1921
35,
Zimmerperspektive mit
Einwohnern. 1921.
30.
33.
Perspective of a
Bob.
Room
Keramisch
Erotisch
Religis
31.
Schoo!.
with Inmates.
32.
34.
Hanging
Fruits.
35.
Trees.
Ceramic
Erotic
Religious
263
1921.
36.
1921.
38.
40.
39.
Blutenantlitze.
36.
264
1922.
1922.
Souvenir
39.
Die Zwitschermaschine.
Face
41.
for
of
Lieschen.
a Flower.
37.
Scene from
40.
Hoffman-like
Tale.
41.
38.
Dying
The
Plants.
Saint.
42.
44.
Drei Hauser.
Schwankendes Gleichgewicht.
1922.
45. Architektur
46.
(Gelb-violett
gestufte Kuben).
1922.
1922.
1923.
'^Ip'l
47. Assyrisches Spiel.
42.
Unstable Equilibrium.
47.
Assyrian
Three Houses.
45. Architecture
Game.
48.
1923.
48.
(Piled yellow
Battle
43. Mystical
and
Miniature.
violet Cubes).
46. Ventriloquist
Man
shouting
The Seafarer
in
".
265
the Bog.
49.
17
IRR 1923.
50.
tffrih'iiiilMi
ill
>i,Ai>*
:t*:
m\
51.
Eros.
54.
1923.
52.
Sonnen-und
49.
51.
Mondblumen.
Eros.
52. Ttie
54.
Sun and
Lomolarm.
1923.
lost.
55.
mad).
50.
Weeping Man.
Moon
Flowers.
At
ttie
Tideland
Wattenmeer (Baltrum).
53.
55.
Am
53.
1923.
Mountain of
1923.
Door.
ttie
Bull.
at Baltrum.
266
HP! ^H
yf^-^^-^:::^r---^
K?^M
i.
^^H
,.:;:?g3jj:;t|^^J
57. Wasserpflanzenschriftbild.
1924.
mSHMHHHI
56.
58.
Schauspielermaske. 1924.
Kleine
Winterlandschaft
Skildufer.
60.
Felsen
am
dem
59.
Meer. 1924.
56. Actor's
58.
mit
Zeichensammlung.
1924.
Gebirge im Winter.
1925.
1924.
Little
Mask.
61.
60. Cliffs
by the Sea.
Skier.
61.
Water
Plants.
59. Collection
Mountains
in
of Signs.
Winter.
267
62. Mystisch
Keramisch
(in
63.
64.
Urn den
Fisch.
Kopfprofil.
1925.
1926.
65.
:^.
66.
Abfahrt der
Schiffe.
1927.
67.
62. Mystic
64.
66.
268
Around
ttie
Fish.
Ceramic.
65.
Variationen
(progressives
63. Profile.
67. Variations
Progressive Motif.
Mofiv).
1927.
>o.
1927.
^.veihgel-Stadt.
69.
/|#|#|# %
f9,t
r -
70. Pastorale
73.
(Rhythmen).
Italienische Stadt.
71.
1927.
74.
1928.
68. City
70.
73.
Italian
Pastorale
Town.
Die Sonne
on two
Rhythms.
74.
Auserwdhlte
streift
69.
75.
1929.
Times of
ttie
1928.
Plants.
Panorama.
Site.
72.
Old Town
the Plain.
75.
Uncomposed Objects
Chosen
1927.
die Ebene.
Hills.
71.
Sfatte.
in
Space.
269
76.
Ein
Kreuzfahrer.
77.
1929.
79.
Irrende Seele.
80.
1929.
78.
1929.
Clown.
1929.
1929.
\ZSA
'^^^i^m
81.
Nekropolis. 1929.
82.
76.
Crusader.
79.
81.
270
Gewagt wagend.
77.
Wandering
Necropolis.
P^'^^^'^'
^^^^
83.
1930.
Soul.
82.
80.
78.
Clown.
Calmly daring.
83.
Twins.
Zwillinge.
1930.
84.
86.
Urn
sieben
Ciber
Ddchern.
1930.
1930.
87.
85.
Rhythmisches.
1930.
mm:
89. Winterbild.
84.
86.
Seven
o'clock
1930.
90.
above
the
89.
85.
fighting.
Roofs.
Winter
87.
inside
Picture.
Physiognomies of Cross-sections.
88
Rhythmical.
271
91.
Segelnde
Stadt.
1930.
Nekropolis.
92.
1930.
93.
Individualisierte
Hohenmessung
94.
Bdume im Oktober.
1931.
1931
T-^
96. Schach.
91
Floating
Town.
1931.
97.
92.
Necropolis.
94.
Trees
96.
272
in
Check
93.
October.
!
97.
Individualised
95.
Ao
932.
Measurement of
Stitcti.
Ad Parnassum.
Fuf tiubbum.
the Beds
-r-
98. Tdnzerin.
101.
103.
1932.
Pflanzen
analytisches.
98.
101.
103.
99.
Little
Dancer.
104.
99.
blue Devil.
104.
1932.
102.
Der
Plants
KiJnftige.
The Man
Small
105.
100.
1932.
Frauenmaske.
1933.
Arab Song.
Town among
of the Future.
Arabischcs Lied.
1933.
analytic.
102.
100.
the Rocks.
105.
Female Mask.
273
106.
108.
Dame und
Tier.
1933.
107.
Angst. 1934.
109.
Blhendes. 1934.
IO.
Trouernd. 1934.
I
106.
274
IO.
Mourning.
108.
Botanical
III.
Child
107.
Theatre.
consecrated
109.
to
12.
Dame
Dtmon. 1935.
Fear.
Blossom.
(Woe).
112.
Dame Demon.
113.
16.
Zeichen auf
dem
Feld.
Labiler Wegweiser.
119.
114.
1935.
1937.
17.
Ueberschach.
Gedanken an Nachkonnnnenschaft.
16.
13.
Signs
in
119.
1936.
17.
14.
1937.
120.
1937.
the Field.
Unstable Signpost.
Betroffene Stadt.
Stricken
Super-check
120.
18.
Zeichen
18.
15.
in
Gelb.
1937.
Harmonisierter Kampf.
Town.
!
15.
1937.
Yellow Signs.
Harmonised Struggle.
275
121.
122.
124.
\ r
126.
123.
1937.
125.
Revolution
BiJtinenlandschaft.
des
Viaduktes.
1937.
1937.
^^
1
Bilderbogen.
V
1937.
121. Oriental
127.
Garden.
124.
126.
276
Beginnende Kuhle.
Picture Page.
122.
Coelin-Frucht.
Early Chill.
Sextet of Spirits.
127.
Azure
125.
Fruit.
128.
1938.
123.
Park
Stage Landscape.
128.
Park near
(-ucerne).
bei L (-uzern).
1938.
129.
Rote Weste.
132.
1938.
Timider Brutaler.
130.
Zerbrochener
Schlssel.
1938.
1938.
133.
I3i.
Vorhaben
Mach
(EntwurQ.
1938.
^
%
'
134.
129.
134.
1938.
135.
132.
Broken Key.
Red Waistcoat.
Dancing
Cj^df
130.
for Fear.
Sport. 1938.
135.
Miss Sport.
133.
136.
131.
Left.
Intention.
136.
277
^
138.
"7
Die Vase.
1938.
142.
Rausch.
die
Kuste.
141.
Insula
Dulcamara.
The Vase.
the Coast.
138.
140.
Intoxication.
Rich
Insu'a
Daemonie.
1939.
Harbour
Dulcamara.
143.
1938.
143.
142.
278
1938
1939.
137.
139.
1938.
*i
140.
139.
Hafen.
^^
u
137.
Reicher
Possessed.
141.
Fruits
on blue.
144.
Ernste Miene.
*ILll|Mipj,l|L|JI
147.
La
M.
1939.
145.
1939.
150. Assel
Kerzen-Flammen.
148.
im Gehege. 1940.
La
146.
Wachsamer
Engel. 1939.
fs^
Belle Jardiniere.
147.
Unterwassergarten. 1939.
145.
Belle Jardiniere.
150.
Woodlouse
151. Stilleben
Underyvater Garden.
148.
in
149.
1939.
Enclosure.
151. Still-life
146.
am
Schalttog.
Fenster.
1940.
Guardian Angel.
149.
Stained-glass Saint.
on Leap Day.
279
1940.
Maske.
158.
152.
155.
Woman
in
Alea
1940.
jacta.
National Costume.
158.
280
Mask.
159.
153.
Captive.
|56.
159.
154.
Flora of the
Death and
1940.
Drummer.
Rocks.
Fire.
157.
Sailor.
Klee's Writings
At
In
1923, another of Klee's essays,
V^ays of Studying Nature (Wage des
down
note
need to
creations.
life,
tells of
his
his
efforts to
impress people, of
enthusiasms and of
his
his
drinking bouts.
tion
up to
moral and
interesting
It
an
is
exceptionally
document.
From November
1911
Two years
Decem-
An
and musical
capital
life in
the Bavarian
lished in Berne.
In
German
an
in
edition was
New York
under the
Gallery,
XIII,
edited by Kasimir
Edschmid (publisher, Erich Reiss, Berlin). Part of it was translated into English under the title Paul Klee, 2nd edit.,
Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1945.^
published
in
by the Nierendorf
title
Pedagogical
published
Precise
Experiments
the
in
Realm of Art, parts of which were reproduced in English under the title Pou/
in
Museum
the Jena
cularly important,
article
in
English
1944
in Staat-
1919-1923.
later,
published
Klee Speaks
until
Weimar,
Bauhaus,
liches
artistic evolu-
by his
Zurich, 1957).
lished
in
1924
in
is
parti-
English
translation
by
entitled
On Modern
Art,
Paul
The
Findlay,
with an intro-
in
Bauhaus from
fusely illustrated
work
(edited
byJurg
&
Co.,
Basle Stuttgart,
1956)
demonway the
281
carefully
thought
out,
circumspect
2,
An
published
Principal Exhibitions
in
article
catalogue
zum
der Kritik
No.
on W. Kandinsky
in
the
of the Jubilaumsausstellung
Up
experienced some
works accepted
and galleries. The
Klee
1912
to
exhibitions
in
in
in
Salon
in
one-man exhibition of 56
works from the years 1907-1910 was
His
held
first
Switzerland
in
in
282
1910-191
in
I.
It
the Kunst-
gallery
1908.
in
The
six of his
in
halie, Basle.
In 191 I, the Thannhauser Gallery in
Munich, which in the same year
organized thefirst publicshowingofthe
drawings.
In
1912, he
took part
in
the Second
Munich; in 1913, he
Sturm Callery in
1917, at the dada Callery in
Goltz Gallery
in
exhibited
the
Berlin;
in
at
Zurich.
in
Hitler's
1933, there
were
in
Germany.
In
tations
show
more important
even
an
artist,
of 356 works.
shown
already
in
1920 and
him
160
works
same
year,
1930; 40
in
the
Dusseldorf
in
Now, he showed
1927.
Berlin: 56
in
1929;
works
his
in
in
in
1928; 150
in
1931. In the
Kunstverein
fur
die
in
Jeune). In
shown
in
at
New
Paris
{Callery Bernheim
1930, 63 of his
the
Museum
York.
wards,
Klee exhibited
in
London
{Mayor Callery 1934 and 1935; London
Gallery 1939);
in
managed by the
D. H. Kahnweiler
in
Dussel-
exhibited
also
at
1919 and
{Zinglers Kabinett
Frankfurt
1921), at
1919);
him
at
at
1924),
Fides 1924,
In
1930,
museunn
Vienna.
in
1924, the
In
showed
Anonymous
exhibition
his first
in
in
exhibition
1925
at
the
Vavin-Rospoil
in
Paris,
in
Surrealist painters.
Callery
In
the
first
group of
Three years
later.
Berne {Kunst-
in
Callery,
Klee
in
Art
dealer,
1934-1938; Calerle
works
new
artist's
halle
his
in
1937 they began to circulate in a number of German towns.) From then on-
dorf.
works were
Modern Art
exhibited 252 of
of
1940) and
in
other
in
ized in Switzerland
halle 1940), in
1941).
some of them
between
Other
and
1945
&
{Bucholz
Museum
Callery,
Basle
1940
Nierendorf
in
exhibitions,
Willard
Callery
in
London
New York
Callery
1940,
and
1942,
1941
283
Chicago
Club
{Arts
Francisco
1941),
{Museum of Art
San
in
1941),
of
exhibitions increased
1945
nunnber. They
in
at
Lucerne
and
1948),
were organized
Rosengart
Klee
peace,
{Calerle
Basle
in
{Calerle d'Art
in
{Kunsthaus
d'Art
1948),
Paris
in
Allendy
1948,
Moderne
1948;
Colette
{Calerle
Musee National
Calerle
Jeanne
1952,
Museum
1948);
in
Kunsthalle 1949),
Otto Ralfs
Dusseldorf {Hetjens
in
Mannheim
1949),
{Stadtische
Brunswick {Calerle
in
in
Hanover {Kestner
and else-
1954),
where.
Retrospective exhibitions were also
held
in
cipal
Museum
1948 and
National Callery
in
1957,
London
at
the
1945, at the
in
Sao Paulo
number
of Ameri-
Bibliography
in
Museum
The
first
the Sturm
(Sturm-Picture
Bilderbuch
Book) No.
3,
Life,
Works and
"I
Germany", wrote
has so many new
in
Wedderkop "who
things to say."
In
1929, Will
Grohmann
published
by Louis Aragon,
Paul
Eluard,
Ren
showed
des
Klee's
in
91
Cahiers
d'Art,
Paris,
27
pages,
illustrations).
and
Georg Schmidt
at
his
Reden zu seinem
1940 (Paul Klee,
Todestag, 29 Juni
Speeches on the Day of his Death, 29th
June 1940) (18 pages, 5 illustrations).
In 1950, Five Essays on Klee, by Merle
funeral,
284
Paul
Klee,
How-
Ross
his art;
in
New York
reproductions
In
the
demonstrate
Paul
art:
importance
the
Klee,
Wege
of
his
bildnerischen
a subtle,
book
it
Klee's
some
painting
position with
of
bring
eloquent juxta-
into
works
number
of which
of Picasso, Braque,
some twenty
years, and
whom
to
Kohlhammer,
illustrations;
trations). Will
graph
was
German
Grohmann's
also
published
W.
Edition:
French
486
edition:
486
Flinker,
172
large
illus-
mono1954:
in
454
pages,
is
in
the nature of
He
its
its
scope. Finally,
given below
himself on
in
chronological order.
Klee,
Gallimard,
Peintres
Nouveaux
1930, Coll.
37 illustrations); Will
pages,
(63
Grohmann, Handzeichnungen (DrawKiepenings) 1921-1930, Muller &
I.
heuer,
Berlin,
illustrations),
1934
English
(30
pages.
Edition:
74
The
285
New
tions),
New German
illustra-
edition, Mijiler
&
rendorf,
Oxford University
York, 1941. Curt Valentin,
New
Press,
New
Kahnweiler,
E.
S.
Palettes).
Grohmann.
Will
tions);
Handzeichnungen,
and
Paris,
New York
(Coll.
illustra-
Paul
Klee,
Wies-
Insel-Verlag,
Paris,
1953, Bibliotque Aldine des
Arts (6 pages, 20 illustrations); Will
New
Ten Reproductions
Grohmann,
ings
dessins
Reproductions of Works
Watercolour
in
Editoriale,
Venice,
illustrations);
1948
Hans
pages,
Tipografico
(25 pages, 6
Friedrich
Braun,
Klee,
Harmann,
illustra-
tions),
Art,
Geist,
Hamburg, 1948
illustrated);
Felix
Klee,
Paul
Klee,
aquarelles
et
watercolours and
drawings), Bergguen, Paris, 1953 (21
pages,
(Paul
Klee,
Georg Schmidt,
illustrated);
bringt
Angel
Woldemar
das
(An
Cev/unschte
Engel
true),
Baden-Baden, 1953
with commentary);
A. Forge, Paul Klee, Faber & Faber,
London. 1954 (24 pages, 72 illustra(12
Klein,
illustrations
Marcel
tions);
Somogy,
Brion.
1955
Paris.
illustrations);
Magic
Klee,
(23
Aimery
pages,
Joseph-Emile
72
Muller,
Klee,
(1879-1940), Faber
1948
(24
pages,
&
II
Faber,
London,
illustrations);
286
Squares
(10
pages,
20
illustrations);
Doetsch-Benziger
Collection.
Basle),
1896
Arco
Arco
South
SiJdtirol
1906
(Uncatalogued).
Tyrol.
colour: 3|"x3f".
F.
Drawing
and
water-
K. Collectiori, Berne.
1897
Elfenau,
6i"
Berne (Uncatalogued).
Portrait of
Pencil;
12^x1
9".
F,
my
li".
K. Collection, Berne.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
1908
1898 (circa)
Skizzenbuchblatt.
Landscape from
Stilleben,
Still
Sketch-book.
Crayon
Iirx7|".
6^x9^".
Life,
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
2
Vogelkafig auf der Saule. (60)
Bird-cage on the Column. Crayon: 8|"x6".
1903
10
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
in
hoherer Stellung
(Invention 6).
Two Men meet: Each supposing the other to
be of Higher Rank. Etching: ^"x7^".
2
sich.
1909
Selbstzeichnung zu einem Holzschnitt. (39)
Drawing for
Self-portrait
Chinese ink: 5J"x5f".
F. K. Collection, Berne.
Woodcut.
I
1904
Komiker
(Invention 4).
Comedian
Etching: 5|"x6J".
I.
I.
Young Woman
2rx4|".
in a
Deck
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
1905
iirxsr.
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
K. Collection, Berne.
chair.
Ink-drawing:
12
K. Collection, Berne.
1910
Mannlicher Kopf, jugendlich, mit blauen
Augen. (96)
Youthful Male Head with blue Eyes. Ink and
water-colour: 5|"x3i".
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
287
Hannah.
C.
F.
(66).
Wash: 7i"x4i".
Schong Collection,
New
1911
Voltaire: 'Make way, nnake
end Colonel' {Candide,
Chinese ink: 4|"x9".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
York.
way
on
13
Chapter
15).
(80)
Hommage
Picasso.
(192).
Oil
on canvas:
15
in
Chinese ink:
14
3^"x7i".
14
1915
Stadtische Darsteiiung. (117)
Representation of a City.
Water-colour:
8^x41".
1912
Skizze einer stadtischen Strasse. (25)
Sketch of a Street in a Town. Chinese ink:
9rxl2r.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
16
1913
F.
18
C.
Schang Collection,
New
i^^x^^".
19
York.
23
Anatomy
(48)
Aphrodite.
chalk: 9"x7i".
of
Water-colour
on
17
K. Collection, Berne.
Katzen. (27)
Cats. Chinese ink: 4|"x6".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
13
Kakendaemonisch.
26
Water-colour on
mounted on cardboard
(73).
Im Steinbruch. (135)
the Quarry. Water-colour
ink:
1916
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
In
16
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
F.
card-
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
F.
15
K. Collection, Berne.
7rx9r.
on
paper:
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
17,
8rx9r.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
1917
Farbenwinkel. (50)
Colour Corner. Water-colour: 7^"x5^".
1914
Kleiner Hafen. (146)
Little Port. Water-colour: 6f'x5i".
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
F.
20
on
18
K. Collection, Berne.
C.
Schang
Collection,
New
York.
19
\ |
Mit
dem
(51)
288
12
F.
Star.
20
Ab
Sr'x
F.
dem Wasser.
on
Lithograph
the
30
21
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Festival
lorxzr.
lOi".
Fest auf
Versunkenheit. (I 13)
Meditation Self-portrait.
(136)
Water-colour
Water.
paper: J^^xT.
C. Schang Collection,
New
cardboard:
I0rx8r.
26
on
22
York.
B.
(156)
letter B. Oil
on canvas:
27
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
ink: 3|''x5''.
22
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
1918
Einsiedelei. (61)
Hermitage.
canvas on chalk,
/fxlOi".
23
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Mit
dem
23
Adler. (85)
With the
Water-colour on chalk on
paper, backed with cardboard: 6f"xlOi".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
24
Eagle.
Tiergarten. (42)
Little
6rx3r.
F.
1920
Traumlandschaft mit Koniferen. (1 10)
Dream Landscape with Conifers. Watercolour, paper on cardboard: 5J"x8i''.
K. Collection, Berne.
21
9^ x 6^*.
Architecture
Crayon: 6i"x8".
Fantastic
22
dem
Reiter.
the
Rider.
29
I5"x9r.
30
Schulhaus. (23)
School. Oil on cardboard: I4|"x
Leigh B. Block Collection, Chicago.
If"
31
Oil
cardboard.
Edgar Horstniann Collection, Hamburg.
on
32
Vogeldrama. (93)
Bird Drama. Coloured drawing: ZJ'x T.
The Solomon Guggenheim Museum, New York. 75
I
with
35
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Kind. (70)
Child. Indelible pencil: ^l''x^".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Wunderbare Landung.
(192)
Zeichnung zu
'Pflanzen, Erd
und
Luftreich'.
(205)
'Plants, Earth and Kingdom of
the Air*. Chinese ink: 81" x7^".
39
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Drawing for
1919
Dreitakt, mit der Drei. (68)
25
Schieiertanz. (34)
Dance of the
Veil.
Water-colour drawing:
7rxlOJ'.
31
42
289
in
ink:
7rx7k".
(53)
29
Departure
1922
Ausschnitt aus einem Ballett zur Aeolsharfe.
for
Voyage.
the
Chinese
Ink:
34
Perspective
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
33
ink:
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Hangende Fruchte.
on
I^"x8|".
54
Hanging
Colour
37
The
45
81"
Ph;7/p
121".
Goodwin
Collection.
drawing,
York.
41
on
paper:
Edgar Kaufmann,
New
39
York.
Museum
of Modern Art,
New
40
York.
paper
44
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
oil:
i".
37
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
1923
Architektur
(Gelb-violett
gestufte
Kuben).
(62)
Mundes Kuss
(aus
Ventriloquist
Man
shouting
Douglas Cooper
in
Bog.
If".
46
(142)
Mouth
290
New
Water-colour: I5|"x
15".
I3rx8r.
(70)
I6"x
linen:
Basle.
8f".
48
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Kunstmuseum,
1921
36
on wood:
14^"
mounted
xlO^.
47
Zeichnung zur
Oper 'Der
Seefahrer'. (123)
Battle Scene from the comic-fantastic Opera
'The
Seafarer'.
Water-colour and oil
Madame
Der
(208)
53
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
48
Strasse im Lager. (146)
Seiltanzer. (121)
*Camp
*The
Tightrope-walker.
paper: 9rx 121".
on
Water-colour
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Water-colour
on
cardboard:
57
32
Nordsee-Bild. (246)
paper on
Water-colour,
board: I2"x ISf".
"North
Road.
I0"xl2r.
Rosengart Gallery, Lucerne.
Sea.
card-
Child on the
I".
65
52
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
(I
1-24)
68
on
paper:
IRR.
17
(136).
Water-colour
Srxlli".
Richard Doetsch-Benziger Collection, Basle.
56
K. Collection, Berne.
IOi"x Of".
Hans Meyer Collection. Berne.
I
50
51
I7|".
Sf
49
Water-colour
Birds.
10".
>,
(95).
Chinese
ink
and
41
chalk:
i".
43
1924
Baumblute. (56)
Blossom.* Pen-drawing: 9^"x
4".
58
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
51
47
The
Lomolarm. (172)
The weeping Man (L'Homme aux iarmes).
Water-colour on paper, wax base: I3"x9".
F.
C.
Schang Collection,
New
52
York.
Reiher. (155)
50
11^x131".
Private Collection, Berlin.
53
if".
54
Schlangenwege. (U.I 7)
"Snake Paths. Water-colour
linen: I8i"x25".
and
wax on
187
Schauspielermaske. (252)
Actor's Mask. Oil on canvas: I4^"x 12^".
Sidney Janis Collection,
New
York.
56
Wattenmeer
(Baltrum). (263)
Tideland at Baltrum. Water-colour on paper:
6i"x8r.
Mrs. Marian Willard-Johnson Collection, Locust
Valley. U.S.A.
55
Bei
Taormina
(Scirocco). (220)
29
New
Skilaufer.
(85)
colour, paper
F.
C.
New
Schang Collection,
64
on
Oil
''Little
muslin:
I4i"xl2r.
Urvater Collection, Brussels.
81
C im Hafen. (K.5)
C in Harbour. Oil
and distemper on
Schiff
Little
Tx
57
York.
dem
58
York.
*Ship
II
II
Village
7rx
Zeichensannmlung. (189)
72
rising
Kite.
Water-colour:
Ili"-
90
on
Felsen
Cliffs
59
am Meer. (230)
by the Sea. Water-colour: 7^"x7|''.
Little
F.
60
C.
New
Schang Collection,
Einsiedelei. (S.2)
1925
and water-colour on
69
Keramisch
Mystic Ceramic.
Oil
(in
der
Art
on
cardboard:
eines
Stillebens). (B.8)
I2rxl8r.
Kopfprofil. (C.9)
on plaster: ^"
F. K. Collection, Berne.
Profile. Oil
BildnisbiJsten
Schang Collection,
(74)
59
Klee-Stiftung. Berne.
1926
Barbarisch-Klassisch-Festlich. (P.9)
Barbaric, Classical, Solemn. Ink and gouache
on paper: IIJ"x
14^".
99
and
12".
New
F.
63
York.
Schang Collection,
ink:
New
I|"x5f".
66
York.
Pregnant
Woman.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
I6|'
61
Drachen-Kampf.
(S.5)
C.
ink
46
Crayon
110
62
lOJ".
292
Skizze.
55
F.
li*.
Mystisch
K. Collection, Berne.
96
York.
C.
Schang
Collection,
New
York.
63
on
Botanischer Garten.
Botanical Garden. Pen-drawing: 9|"xl5|".
44
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
71
Mondlied. (Q.3)
12".
74
Abfahrt der
Idyllisch-nachbarlich. (E.4)
10"
62
l|"x ISy.
93
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Schiffe.
(D.IO)
canvas,
mounted on
66
Urn den
Fisch. (C.4)
Art,
New
oil
on canvas:
64
York.
Max
1927
Tiere bei Vollmond. (V.8)
Times of the
68
79
Auserwahlte
F.
Rosenzwerg. (G.
I)
Dwarf with
Regen. (0.9)
Rain. Chinese ink:
II
fx
83
18^".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
87
Statte. (X.8)
Chosen
Site.
Cote de Provence
6.
71
Water-
Resonance
12".
118
(X.4)
If
88
F.
Vollmond.
*Full
I
Moon.
or X
(L.3)
Oil and
13".
85
ink:
6^ X 81".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
80
ink: \0^"
l|".
67
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
drawing:
Geringer Ausserordentlicher,
An
Mrxl8i".
245
Bildnis. (F.9)
Fellow,
background: llf'xSJ"
Private Collection, Berne.
103
76
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
3"
20|".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
104
ink:
l|"x
18^".
78
293
1928
Alte Stadt Ueberblick. (Qu.8)
Town
Panorama.
Water-colour
on
paper: I|"x8f".
Richard Doetsch-Benziger Collection. Basle.
72
Old
Uncomposed Objects
board: I3rx9i".
F.
74
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Italian
K. Collection, Berne.
73
Ein Kreuzfahrer, (T.2)
91
Obertone. (K.9)
Overtones. Chinese ink: I6rxl0i".
Private Collection, Berne.
//
F.
Madame Werner
10)
canvas:
77
Danger
at Sea.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
I2|".
84
4^x161".
Clown.
(D.3).
Oil
white: 26|"xl9r.
Curt Valentin Collection,
New
Water-colour
Soul.
drawing: 9^" X
122-23
on
chalk,
I2f".
lO
wood and
8|"x W^'.
122
1929
107
(3 h.l9)
135
121
F.
80
2.94
120
K. Collection, Berne.
Nekropolis. (S.I)
Necropolis. Gouache: I5"x9|''.
D. H. Kahnweiler, Paris.
Monument im
in
81
Fruchtland. (N.I)
fertile
Land. Water-colour,
12".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
137
K. Collection, Berne.
126
and
pen,
paper on
Monument
*The Twins'
pen-
79
Eingezuntes. (Qu.4)
Cloisonn. Oil on paper, stuck on
and
14^".
78
York.
Wandering
plaster:
76
I2rx9r.
134
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
123
Feigenbaum. (X.IO)
Water-colour on paper:
F. C. Schong Collection, New York.
*Figtree.
rx8J".
131
Schang Collection,
(AE.5)
x\r
New
95
York.
ink:
(J. 5)
An
walk.
101
Animal
having
Chinese
108
ink:
i4rx8r.
Angela Rosengart Collection, Lucerne.
109
Fluten. (UE. 7)
If
94
K. Collection, Berne.
I3i"x8r.
Hermann Rupf
Ordensburg. (O.I)
Castle of the Order. Ink-drawing:
86
Wstengebirge. (K.I3)
Desert Mountains. Crayon; Iirxi
C.
or X
Water-colour
on
149
Springer. (C.3)
wood
Reed-drawing:
F.
/3
20i" x 20|".
140
K. Collection, Berne.
Fruchte. (X.2)
*Fruit. Water-colour on cloth:
Private Collection, Berne.
or xi6r.
152-53
132
l"x
IS
127
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
97
in
colour:
3|"xlOr.
1930
Gewagt Wagend.
(Y.4)
Calmly
Water-colour
daring.
too
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
on
paper:
12^x91".
82
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Zwillinge. (W.8)
Twins. Oil and
23-1"
chalk:
181".
(i.l)
Verspatetes. (UE.8)
F.
176
92
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Late.
Sangerhalle. (C.9)
*Hall of Singers.
I
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Collection, Berne.
Ig"x9|".
Klee-Stiftung, berne.
Blumenvase. (B.9)
*Model of a Flower Vase. Oil on paper, pochoir:
Plastik einer
water-colour
on
canvas:
X 9r.
*Free,
paper on
F.
New
Water-colour on
York.
172
33rx33r.
84
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
145
295
iirx9r.
Rosengan
Stammtischler. (X.20)
Habitu. Chalk-drawing: QJ'xS^".
An
116
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
87
Gallery, Lucerne.
Studie. (Qu.l9)
Rhythmisches. (E.3)
Rhythmical. Oil on sacking: 27i"x I9|*.
Study. Crayon:
8i"x
13".
102
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
88
1932
Winterbild. (D.6)
Picture. Gouache
Private Collection, Paris.
Winter
on cardboard.
128
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
lifx
F.
181".
90
K. Collection, Berne.
Town.
Water-colour
on
paper:
Extra-Ture.
19".
112
Measurement of
with gum: I8i"x I3f".
119
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Gift. (13-VIII)
on
Poison. Water-colour,
I
92
Individualized
l|"x
paper on cardboard:
19".
193
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Ad
Parnassum.
(X.I 4).
Oil
on
Beds.
93
from
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
97
Kunstmuseum, Berne.
Tanzerin. (X.I
I)
1931
Flucht vor sich. (K.5)
124
98
Pflanzenanalytisches. (V.9)
Plants analytic. Oil on sacking: 20|"x7i".
Richard Doetsch-Benziger Collection, Basle.
Stitch.
1
21"
cardboard:
19".
95
K. Collection, Berne.
canvas
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
117
Schach. (Y.3)
Check! Oil on plaster.
296
100
on
Of x 201"-
7r'x
101
22".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
99
canvas:
391" x 491".
the
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Flight
I3i"x
I2rx7".
91
Nekropolis. (0.7)
Necropolis. Colours mixed with glue
paper: 32t"x26|".
David Thompson Collection, Pittsburg.
Pastel
(S.I I)
24^x18^.
Hernnann Rupf Collection, Berne.
Individualisierte
(R.2)
20rxl4r.
89
102
F.
K. Collection. Berne.
157
Lagunenstadt. (M.3)
Gelehrter. (Z.6)
186
Park-bild. (X.I4)
Picture of a Park. Water-colour: I3"xi
F. K. Collection, Berne.
203
173
Polyphonie. (X.I 3)
Basle.
Little
Garten-Rhythmus.
Garden Rhythm.
7^x1
F.
10^*.
Ii"x9f^
(t.5)
on
Oil-tempera
linen:
li".
K. Collection, Berne.
165
103
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Gartentor M. (M.I 5)
M. Oil and gouache on muslin:
lir'x 13".
Garden Gate
161
Frauenmaske. (4E.2)
Female Mask. Oil on canvas: 22" x
F. C. Schang Collection, New York.
Tier. (M.I8)
Lady and Animal. Water-colour on paper:
64
F.
Abwarts. (M.20)
I3f"
125
X 24i".
Schang
Collection,
New
106
York.
Double
Face.
Water-colour drawing:
I2rx8r.
F.
139
K. Collection, Berne.
(I)
Captain.
Oil-tempera on
papier
mch: 22"x4f".
F.
8|"
C.
Doppelgesicht. (E.3)
Barbarian
105
Dame und
Gewagtes. (N.6)
Barbaren-Feldherr.
18^".
K. Collection, Berne.
181
Welthafen.
World Harbour. Colour mixed with gum,
paper on cardboard: IZfx If".
I
}90
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
143
1934
Zu
Berg. (M.5)
1933
Angriff der Nachstfolgenden. (V. 18)
Attack by those coming after. Brush-drawing:
I8r'x24r.
ich
I
werde
shall say
sagen. (T.7)
.
Crayon: 6|"x
I2|".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
New
'Diana
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
154
Urkunde. (Z.3)
Document. Oi and plaster on gauze 8|" x
I
7^'
184
Geoffnet. (A.6)
Open. Water-colour
wood: 16" x 2 If".
K. Collection, Berne.
and
wax,
141
129
York.
Auswandern. (U.I)
Emigrating. Crayon: I3"x8i".
F.
Und
And
151
muslin
on
177
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
194
K. Collection, Berne.
195
Wildwasser. (16)
Waters. Water-colour and pen on
paper: Ilf"xl9i".
Untamed
198
297
(N.I5)
*Gate
144
Schwerbefruchtet. (Qu.lO)
Heavily pregnant. Crayon.
133
Siesta.
the
(L.I 8)
Gouache:
Garden.
deserted
12rx
\7i".
Private Collection, Berne.
206
I2rxl8r.
F.
202
K. Collection, Berne.
138
Confused
of
Zwei-Frucht-Landschaft
Fruit Landscape
9i"xl3".
*Two
Crayon: 6|"x25y.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
150
F.
II.
(L.9)
Water-colour:
II.
209
K. Collection, Berne.
Furnished
Arctic.
Gouache:
\^"x
18^".
216
Angst. (U.2)
Fear. Oil
New
York.
107
W-geweihtes Kind.
(K.I
Child consecrated to
I)
9".
oil: 51" X
Albright Art Gallery, Buffalo.
1 1
oil
on canvas:
ill
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Bluhendes. (T.I9)
Blossom. Oil on canvas: 3l|"x3li''
Dr. . Friedrich Collection, Zurich.
Zeichen auf
109
Trauernd. (8)
Mourning. Water-colour, paper on cardboard
19^x121".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
10
1935
Spiel auf
Game on
dem Wasser.
*Caligula.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
113
(4).
Water-colour on paper:
I9i"x9r.
F.
147
221
K. Collection, Berne.
1937
Schwanenteich. (V.I)
Pond with Swans. Colour mixed with black
gum: I8|"x 16^".
Mrs. John Rockefeller Collection,
New
York.
170
\''x7".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
135
Ausdrucks-Leier. (14)
Expressive Lyre. Crayon: IOJ"x7".
Klee-Svftung, Berne.
K. Collection. Berne.
163
148
Neu
Rindenkultur. (P.5)
Bark Culture. Sous-verre:
298
Feld. (M.I 7)
199
F.
dem
in
1936
Betroffene Stadt.
Stricken Town. Oil on plaster: I7|''x I3|".
114
Dr. W. Loeffler Collection. Zurich.
(3)
Warning. Crayon:
Signs
*Newly
I
I"x7^".
9i":-
155
laid-out Garden.
Gouache on
plaster:
I2r.
212
115
Labiler
Wegweiser.
I9j
(L.5)
Kunsthaus, Zurich.
117
Pastel,
paper on card-
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Erfolg.
(W.
17)
Incantation. Brush-drawing,
gouache: \\^" x I6g".
Siegfried Rosengart Collection, Lucerne.
Successful
18
black
179
Kinderspielplatz. (T.8)
1938
Pathos. (D.I). Pink paper: I9i"x I3J".
F. K. Collection. Berne.
189
^59
Gedanken an Nachkonnnnenschaft.
(P. 14)
F.
158
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Beschworung mit
167
116
K. Collection, berne.
Ueberschach. (R.I)
Super-check! Oil on canvas: 47^^x43^'
7"xll".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
119
K. Collection. Berne.
F.
K. Collection, Berne.
Tiere
Gehege.
irn
Animals
in
192
(8)
Paddock.
the
Brush-drawing.
9"xlir.
Harmonisierter Kampf. (206)
Harmonised
Struggle.
Pastel
F. C.
on
Schang Collection,
22rv33r.
120
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Kunsthalle,
171
\"
x7".
227
Mi".
121
Der
The
Water-colour: lOf
160
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
York.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
New
York.
gum:
Garten im Orient. (S.7)
Oriental Garden. Pastel on paper: I4J"
F. C. Schang Collection, New York.
New
canvas:
122
canvas:
Hamburg.
123
Buhnenlandschaft. (U.I 2)
Stage Landscape. Pastel on canvas: 22|" x33|".
Hermann Rupf Collection, Berne.
125
Coelin-Frucht. (D.8)
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
C.
Schang
Collection,
Timider Brutaler.
Bilderbogen. (Q.I3)
Picture Page. Oil on canvas: 23J"x20".
The Phillips Gallery, Washington.
127
Kl&e-Stiftung, Berne.
New
York.
129
(1.38)
126
130
299
131
York.
Skylla.
Scylla.
(W.3)
Drawing
Shipwrecked. Crayon:
134
Klee-Stiftung, berne.
vom
gum on
paper:
33^x121".
175
1^"-
183
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Architecture
135
K. Collection, berne.
in
If'xB".
182
If'xB^".
174
K. Collection, Berne.
(J.2)
Paint
34|"x2li".
GriJn
New
York. 137
on
on
linen:
220
Schlucht
138
Distemper
green.
i4"xi3r.
Dr.
jute:
in grijn. (S.5)
*Green
F.
in
Precfpice
in
lOf'xSr.
F.
251
K. Collection, Berne.
4r'x27|".
139
K. Collection, Berne.
Pomona.
(J. 14).
Oil
on canvas: 26f"x20J".
242
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Insula
Dulcamara.
{C,\
on
canvas:
22rx68r'.
1939
140
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
canvas:
Gedicht
Poem
mixed with gum on
2l|"x 53 i".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
141
F.
300
3|"x
18^".
247
(D.20)
The Park
F.
Baum
*Tree
in
in
8rx!3r.
iir'^'Si".
K. Collection. Berne.
in
in
142
IfxB'.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Sport. (D.9)
gum on
Fall. (B.9).
A^rs.
133
Die Vase.
lOf.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Klee-Stiftung, berne.
The Vase.
Sf x
SchiffbriJchige. (Z.7)
29rx44i\
F.
Chinese ink:
132
Vorhaben.
Das Fraulein
in
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
188
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
New
166
F.
K. Collection. Berne.
224
I6rxl2r.
F.
25r X 3
228
K. Collection, Berne.
Ii"x8".
F.
on canvas:
i".
Hans A^eyer
142
Collection, Berne.
(WW.
8)
200
Daemonie.
I
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
i,
Rausch. (Y.l)
on cardboard: 8|"x
I2|".
143
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
I
If'x
I6|'
'208
K. Collection, Berne.
201
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Unterwassergarten. (NN.6)
Underwater Garden. Oil on
Bruderschaft. (ZZ.I2)
Fraternity. Pencil: 8i"x
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
215
Angstausbruch. (G.7)
Outburst of Fear. Pen-drawing: I0|"x8|
Engel. (UU.I9)
Guardian Angel. Drawing in pen and distemper:
'l78
I8rxl2r.
205
on canvas: 37|"x27|".
214
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
I|"x8".
255
Kerzen-Flammen. (6)
Candles and Flames. Black chalk and paint
mixed with gum on paper: I9f''x 13". 148
Will zu
pleased. Crayon:
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Of"
x 81".
196
1^".
197
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Harbour
Pen-drawing: 4|"x
If".
156
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Island.
14".
229
K. Collection, Berne.
Crayon:
Engel. (UU.I4)
Poor Angel. Water-colour and tempera on
paper: 7^"x I2J".
236
Private Collection, Berne.
and
*With
213
K. Collection, Berne.
F.
1^".
K. Collection, Berne.
If".
240
Doppelinsel. (FF.I7)
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
91"
Schiffs. (X.I 7)
to go aboard. Water-colour:
210
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Double
F.
F.
K. (G.I2)
at K.
Wants
Armer
Missmutig. (R.I 5)
Hafen von
147
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
I^"x8''.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Little
146
Not
145
Wachsamer
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
canvas:
39rx3ir.
l|".
i"
X 8^
204
Klee-Stiftung. Berne.
218
301
Und noch
ein Kamuff.
(UU.3)
Alea
C.
New
Schang Collection,
219
York.
1940
Paint
I).
F.
C.
Schang
New
Collection,
152
York.
Gefangen. (Uncatalogued)
New
1",
Frederick
Zimmermann
Collection,
New
York.
230
York.
Aegypterin. (X.I 5)
(L.I
jacta.
I3rx8r.
153
Paukenspieler. (L.IO)
IfxSI;''.
K. Collection, Berne.
Drummer.
207
Paint
I3rx8r.
154
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
VorstandtAbend. (R.7)
Evening in the Suburbs. Oil-tempera on
jute:
5rxi3r.
F.
Woman
K. Collection, Berne.
225
I8rx
with gum:
mixed
Paint
J".
155
Klee-Stiftung. Berne.
Amateur-Pauker. (H.4)
I3'
Private Collection.
191
Ink-drawing: IIJ"x8".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
237
and
paint
Mexico,
157
231
(L.I 2).
158
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
i^'xS^".
Water-colour:
Il"x8r.
F.
Maske.
Mask. Pastel
New
iirxi3r.
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Biedermeier-Fraulein.
U.S.A.
235
K. Collection, Berne.
156
Matrose. (M.I3)
Sailor.
Water-colour:
despairingly.
srxiir.
F.
35rx27r.
Kunstnriuseum, Berne.
He rows
K. Collection, Berne.
Tod und
Feuer. (G.I 2)
Fire. Oil on canvas: L
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
Death and
xIZI".
159
234
Walkijre. (T.I4)
cardboard:
paper on
223
1^x81".
KleK^-Stiftung, Berne.
Woodlouse
149
7)
Pastel,
cotton on
226
cardboard: \l^"x\6l".
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
150
Blick.
am
Still-life
Klee-Stiftung, Berne.
302
10".
Kiee-Stiftung. Berne.
Schalttag. (N.I 3)
241
gum
Ecce. (T.I8).
151
F.
Drawing: Wy'xSi".
K. Collection, Berne.
239
Index of Persons
Albert-Lazar, Lou, 93
Amiet, 38
Arp. Hans,
77.
Bach,
102,
J. S..
206,212
195,
150,
154,
188, 201,
207
Balladine, Lou, 93
Beardsley, Aubrey, 35
Giedion-Welcker, Carola,
225
Goethe, 30, 150, 156, 197
Gogol, Nicolas, 34
Goltz. 95
Goya. 42. 215
Greco, El. 185
Grohmann.
209.
215,
Grunewald. 217
Gulbransson. Irygve. 215
Umberto, 78
Haller.
Herman.
23. 70
Handel. 154
Bonnard, 55, 83
Botticelli, 31
149,
87.
Boecklin, Arnold, 25
BiJrgi, Rolf,
59,
191.205,225
Campendone, Heinrich, 63
Hebbel. C. P., 38
Heilbut. 38
Hindemith, Paul, 102
Hodler, Ferdinand, 42
Ibsen, H., 38
Carr. Carlo. 78
44
Cezanne. Paul. 42. 51.
Chaplin, Charles, 49
Chekhov, Anton, 56
Cocteau, Jean, 100
Corot. J-B. 42
Cranach, Lucas, 31
Casals. Pablo.
57,
80
De
149,
152,
156,
157,
159,
162,
Klee. Hans. 3, 4
Klee, Mathilde, 3
Disteli, Martin,
59
164. 206.
51.62,67,
16.
18.
70, 191,
192,225,242
Knirr, Professor, 14
Kreydolf, 62
Donatello, 31
Durand-Ruel. Paul, 70
Dijrer, Albrecht, 217
Duse. Eleonora. 29
Kubin, Alfred, 78
Einstein. Albert.
236
Macke, Augustus,
Manet, 42
Feininger, Lyonel,
17
Flake, Otto, 75
Marcks, Gerhard,
Forain, J-L, 30
215
17
303
Merode, Clo
de, 30
Meier-Graefe, 55
Michaux, Henri, 202
42
Sonderegger, Ernst,
Michelangelo, 25
Spiller, Jurg,
Moholy-Nagy.
Sisley. A.,
117
L.,
57,
70
105
Stendhal, 22, 29
Strasser, Professor, 42
Sudermann,
Tacitus. 30
Muche. George. 17
Mijller, Joseph Ennile, 100
Thomann, 62
14, 23,
34
H., 38
Tintoretto, 23, 78
Titian. 31
MiJnter. Gabrielle, 63
Mussorgsky,
156,
208
L.. 16. 30
Toulouse-Lautrec. 51
Tolstoy.
Otero, La
Belle,
30
165, 206,
Uhde. Wilhelm. 70
Unruh, F., 105
217
Vallotton,
Pinturicchio, 23, 31
Pissarro,
Plato,
L.,
Van Gogh,
42
Veronese,
30
F..
57
Puvis de Chavannes, 42
Velasquez, 42
Otto. 149
Raphael. 23. 25. 31
Rjane. 29
Vlaminck. 70
Volboudt, Pierre, 160
Vollard, A., 57
Voltaire, 44
Rembrandt, 185
Vuillard,
Ralfs,
E.,
55
Reni. Guido, 25
Renoir. 42
Rilke, R. M., 93
Rodin, 30
Rousseau. Henri, 70
Rupf, Hernnann. 225
Scheffer. Karl. 55
Wolff. Kurt. 78
Schlemmer. Oskar. 17
Schnnidt, Georg, 167, 225
Wright Brothers, 35
Schnberg, A.,
102,
Beverini, Gino. 78
304
105
Art
PRAEGER PAPERBACKS
Klee
STUDY OF HIS
by
AND WORK
SAN LAZZARO
LIFE
GUALTIERI DI
*A succinct, sympathetic chronicle of the artist's life, with pertinent observations about the music and books and travel that
were influences, and about his friendships with Kandinsky,
Franz Marc, and others. Synchronized with this fabric of events
is an understanding recital of the stages of development in
accompanied by reproductions of paintings and drawings, which enable the reader to follow the text without difficulty.
San Lazzaro writes simply, feelingly and with authority. The
many reproductions have been chosen not only to clarify Klee's
development but also with a canny eye for bringing out all phases
of his prodigious, many sided work. The volume combines a
scholarly approach to modern art with popular appeal. Many of
the reproductions have not previously been reproduced and,
taken in connection with San Lazzaro's very pertinent text, they
add considerably to our knowledge and appreciation of one of
the most individual and influential artists of our time.' the
Klee's
art,
and
made and
>
anyone interested in
THE NATION
*The quality of the color reproductions is really outstanding. We
subscribe to the notion that this is ofie of the "books that
matter".'
library journal
THE author:
is
editor of
modern
art
XX^
Paris.
FREDERICK
III Fourth
A.
PRAEGER,
Avenue,
New York
Printed in lingland
Publishers
N.Y.
3,
Siede,
published in