Emil Nolde
Johannes Vermeer
Segna di Bonaventura
Niccolo' di Pietro Gerini
Agnolo Gaddi
Beato Angelico
Willem Key
Jan Sanders van Hemessen
Maerten de Vos
Hans Vredeman de Vries
Bartholomaus van Bassen
Anthonie de Lorme
Daniel de Blieck
Claude Deruet
Charles Antoine Coypel
Pierre Subleyras
Gerard David of Bruges
Jan Joest van Kalkar
'Emil Nolde - Watercolours' features 24 seldom-seen watercolours in the possession of the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung, that have not been on show for a long time. 'Vermeer in Munich' presents the exceptional private collection amassed by the first king of Bavaria, Max I Joseph, including the Vermeer's 'Woman Holding a Balance', 'Treasures from the Depot' celebrates the anniversary year with a number of paintings from the rich holdings in the Alte Pinakothek collection.
Emil Nolde - Watercolours
Staatliche Graphische Sammlung München in the Pinakothek der Moderne
16.03.2011-15.05.2011
In this exhibition on Emil Nolde (1867-1956) at the Pinakothek der Moderne, the
public will once again be able to view the 24 seldom-seen watercolours in the
possession of the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung, that have not been on show for a
long time. These celebrated and equally well-loved sheets by the famous German
Expressionist, which cover all the subjects otherwise found in his œuvre, can only
be exhibited very rarely due to their extreme light sensitivity.
Nolde turned to watercolour early in his career. He developed his characteristic
style of applying paint in the wet-on-wet technique between 1900 and 1910. From
1911, he used highly absorbent Japanese paper which made the colours run into each
other all the more. The range the subjects found in his other work is also mirrored
in his watercolour paintings. These are not sketches for works in oil, but form a
part of his œuvre in their own right. The watercolours also retain a focus on the
object, be they radiantly luminous or in subdued shades. Form is not sufficient in
itself, all the more so since the colour compositions take on their own independent
existence. Nolde’s style of watercolour painting remained virtually unchanged for
decades which means that it is very difficult to assign the mostly undated sheets to
individual phases of the artist’s work.
The exhibition also draws attention to a fascinating piece of collecting history.
The Staatliche Graphische Sammlung München acquired its first watercolour by Emil
Nolde back in 1927 from the Graphisches Kabinett, Munich (later the Galerie Günter
Franke). Two further acquisitions were made in 1929 and ’30 directly from the artist
in Berlin. The watercolours as well as 16 of the 22 prints by the artist in the
collection escaped the National Socialists’ »Degenerate Art« campaign.
Two watercolours are from the collection owned by a member of the Higher Regional
Court, Karl Osthelder (c. 1860–1945), about whom little is known. In the 1920s,
however, he was already actively involved as a patron of contemporary art being a
»Friend of the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung«, and later left his extensive art
collection to the state of Bavaria.
Sophie and Emanuel Fohn acquired works that had been confiscated during the
»Degenerate Art« campaign in 1937 and which had formerly been in public collections
throughout Germany, largely in exchange for their own collection of drawings from
the early 19th century. In 1964, the husband-and-wife team presented their
collection to the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen. This included an important
watercolour by Nolde that has never been clearly attributed to any collection, but
most probably came from the Folkwang Museum in Essen, or the Städtische Galerie in
Wuppertal-Elberfeld. Both before and after 1945 the Bayerische
Staatsgemäldesammlungen had been collecting paintings on paper which were then
handed to the Staatliche Graphische Sammlung in 1967. Seven watercolours by Nolde
entered the collection this way.
A further ten watercolours came to Munich through the Kruss Collection. Martha (d.
1977) and Markus (1872–1962) Kruss bequeathed their collection of Expressionist art,
that Markus Kruss had started to amass in the wake of World War I, to the state of
Bavaria. Kruss and his first wife, who died in 1942, were friends of Nolde’s, and
with ten watercolours and six prints, he was the artist with the most works on paper
in the Kruss Collection.
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Vermeer in Munich
King Max I Joseph of Bavaria as a Collector of Old Masters
17.03.2011-19.06.2011
The Alte Pinakothek is welcoming a very special guest to its 175th anniversary:
Johannes Vermeer’s “Woman Holding a Balance” from the National Gallery of Art in
Washington. In the early 19th century, this exquisite masterpiece once formed part
of the exceptional private collection amassed by the first king of Bavaria, Max I
Joseph (1756-1825). He focused almost exclusively on 17th-century Dutch masters,
mostly landscapes and genre paintings. To these he added the works of contemporary
painters in Munich who were inspired by such Old Masters. In 1826, one year after
the death of Max Joseph, the private royal collection was sold at auction. Some
exceptional works were acquired for the state collections; others found their way to
the Alte Pinakothek via roundabout routes – as part of Ludwig I’s collection, for
example; many are now scattered far afield. From today’s point of view, the greatest
loss was Vermeer’s painting of 1664.
The special appeal of Vermeer’s paintings is not to be found in the seemingly
everyday scenes frequently depicted, but much more in the atmosphere that these
pictures exude. Seldom, however, is the tranquility so often conjured up in the
works of the Master of Delft so manifestly transposed through the motif as in this
work, which focuses on the moment when the pretty young woman pauses, concentrating
fully on adjusting the balance. What is actually happening is less to be found in a
visible deed but rather in the figure itself. The depiction becomes an allegory to
meditation and reflection on a just and temperate life – literally against the
background of the admonition in the “Last Judgment” that is shown as a painting
within a painting. The carefully thought-out iconocraphic programme, the gentle
brushwork, the effective use of light and not least of all the masterly blend of
colour values make “Woman Holding a Balance” a major work within Vermeer’s œuvre
and, beyond this, one of the most important 17th-century genre paintings in
existence.
Surrounded by a good twenty other exceptional paintings from the “Golden Age” of
Dutch painting, including works by Jacob van Ruisdael, Paulus Potter, Willem van de
Velde the Younger and Philips Wouwerman, the Vermeer painting will give visitors the
opportunity to discover Max I Joseph of Bavaria as a collector of Old Masters for a
period of several weeks from March onwards.
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Treasures from the Depot
17.03.2011-15.01.2012
To mark the anniversary year, a number of paintings from the rich holdings in the
Alte Pinakothek collection, that have seldom been displayed, are on show. Several
have not been seen for more than half a century, others have been exhibited over the
past few years, albeit mostly for just a brief period. Unknown masterpieces as well
as unusual paintings await discovery from 17 March onwards in the North Cabinet
Rooms in the "Klenze Portal" exhibition area in the Alte Pinakothek.
The exhibition opens with Early Netherlandish paintings, three of which deserve a
special mention. These are copies of works by Jan van Eyck and include two
large-format paintings after panels from the Ghent Altarpiece, commissioned by King
Philip II of Spain for the chapel of the royal palace in Madrid and created by
Michiel Coxcie between 1557 and 1559, and the "Head of Christ," a copy from around
1500 of van Eyck's original work of 1438. These are complemented by works of the
Antwerp Mannerists, copies of paintings by Gerard David of Bruges, as well as a
touching husband and wife portrait by Jan Joest van Kalkar.
The adjacent room is devoted to early Italian painting from Florence and central
Italy. Works from the beginning of the 14th to the mid-15th century, including
paintings by Segna di Bonaventura, Niccolò di Pietro Gerini, Agnolo Gaddi and Fra
Angelico, document the high quality and radiant beauty of Florentine art. Fragments
from complex altarpieces, devotional pictures and a portrait highlight painting's
main purpose at that time.
These lead to the large-format history paintings from the Antwerp school from the
1530s to the 1580s. The so-called "Romanists" fuse elements of the Netherlandish
pictorial tradition with Italian painting in their works. Whereas Willem Key's
"Lamentation" is still clearly modelled on older works, Jan Sanders van Hemessen's
powerful, muscular figures reveal a closer examination of Michelangelo's work, whose
acquaintance he may well have made during a trip to Italy. Maerten de Vos'
"Mannalese" with its multitude of elegant, elongated figures represents the "horror
vacui" so typical of Mannerist painting.
These are followed by Dutch architectural studies which were referred to as
"perspectives" in the 17th century. From the late 16th century onward, specialised
painters of this genre focussed on depicting interior and exterior views of
initially imaginary and later real buildings. Following on from his father, Hans
Vredeman de Vries - who was active from the beginning of this development - is his
son, Paul, who worked in Amsterdam and was one of the artists who established
architectural painting in Holland between 1610 and 1620. This reached its peak at
around the middle of the century, as demonstrated by the high-quality paintings of
Bartholomäus van Bassen, Anthonie de Lorme and Daniel de Blieck.
The exhibition is rounded off with works by French artists: from history painting to
portraits, from the 17th centuy to the Rococo. These document the utterly different
manners of expression adopted by painters from Rome, Paris and the Lorraine district
of France: Claude Deruet's "Rape of the Sabines" is still bound to the formal
language of the Mannerists, for example, whereas Charles Antoine Coypel's "Hercules
and Omphale" stands out due to its lively use of colour in the Rubens tradition. The
several studies in oil by Pierre Subleyras are a fascinating testimony to the
creative artistic process.
Image: Johannes Vermeer, Frau mit Waage, 1664. © Washington, National Gallery of Art
Press office: Tine Nehler M.A.
Head of the Press Department
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