Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
Philipp Bauknecht
Jan Wiegers
Albert Muller
Hermann Scherer
Paul Camenisch
With over 160 works - paintings, wood sculptures and works on paper - the exhibition demonstrates the intense artistic and human exchange that took place between Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and a succession of younger artists during the 1920s. Paintings by Kirchner are juxtaposed with works by Philipp Bauknecht, Jan Wiegers, Albert Muller, Hermann Scherer and Paul Camenisch.
Kirchner, Bauknecht, Wiegers and the Group “Rot-Blau”
With over 160 works – paintings, wood sculptures and works on paper - the exhibition
Expressionism from the Mountains demonstrates the intense artistic and human
exchange that took place between Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and a succession of younger
artists during the 1920s. Approximately 55 works by Kirchner are juxtaposed with
works by Philipp Bauknecht, Jan Wiegers, Albert Muller, Hermann Scherer and
Paul Camenisch.
Kirchner, Bauknecht and Wiegers.
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880–1938) came to Davos in 1917 for reasons of health and
began to apply the expressionism he had developed in Dresden and Berlin to the
depiction of the life and landscape of the Bündner mountains. In 1920, he made
friends with the German Philipp Bauknecht (1884-1933), a tuberculosis patient who
had been living in Davos since 1910 and who had found his way to an individual
expressionistic style of painting using strong colours. In addition to their related
styles, the artists were bound by a common desire to immortalise in monumental form
the Alpine landscape and the life of the mountain farmers.
The Dutchman Jan Wiegers (1893-1959) also came to Davos from Groningen with a lung
complaint in 1920 and became friends with Kirchner. He adapted the latter’s
techniques and stylistic elements and after his return home in 1921, conveyed the
basics of the Kirchner style of expressionism to his friends in the artist group “De
Ploeg”. In several journeys to Davos in 1925 and 1926, Wiegers renewed the artistic
dialogue with Kirchner and maintained friendly relations with him until Kirchner’s
death.
Kirchner and the Group “Rot-Blau”
In June 1923, on the occasion of his exhibition in the Kunsthalle Basel, Kirchner
met the young artists from Basel Hermann Scherer (1893-1927) and Albert Müller
(1897-1926). They subsequently often came to see him in Davos for extended working
visits. In the interchange with Kirchner’s art, Scherer and Müller found their
way to their own congenial visual language. On New Year’s Eve in 1924-25, together
with Paul Camenisch (1893-1970), they founded the artist group “Rot-Blau”, which, in
its short but turbulent history, was to make the most important contribution to
Swiss Expressionism. The collaboration of Kirchner with the young artists from Basel
was fruitful for both parties. With Kirchner’s encouragement, for instance, Scherer,
a stonemason by profession, created an impressive series of wood sculptures.
Conversely, Kirchner felt stimulated by Scherer’s competition to increase his own
sculptural activity. However, the early deaths of Müller and Scherer put an
untimely end to the friendship with Kirchner.
Mountain landscapes, Nudes and Portraits of Artists
By grouping the exhibits according to subject, the analogies and also the
differences in the works of the six artists, who often worked side by side on the
same motifs, are demonstrated. In addition to the landscape around Davos and the
life of the mountain farmers, the nude was a central theme, particularly the
depiction of nudes moving freely in the landscape of woods and streams around
Kirchner’s house. The artists also portrayed themselves and each other in numerous
self-portraits, single and group portraits that are still witness to their personal
attachment. A further subject field is the landscape of the Mendrisiotto, where the
“Rot-Blau” artists met regularly.
Press Conference on April 25, 2007, 10 am
Opening on April 26, 2007, 6.30 pm
Kunstmuseum Bern
Hodlerstrasse 8-12 - Bern 7