The Buergi Collection
Buergi Collection is - next to
that of the Klee family - the
largest and most important
private collection of Paul
Klee's work. Gathered
together during the lifetime of
the artist (1879-1940) and
that of his widow Lily Klee
(1876-1946), this collection
of some 130 works
represents an otherwise
unparalleled cross-section of the different periods
of Paul Klee's artistic career.
His first - and perhaps last - presentation of Bürgi
Collection not only offers the viewing public an
excellent survey of Klee's art, it also illustrates a
long-term commitment to the support of art which
had a major influence on the life and work of Paul
Klee and his artistic estate over more than four
decades are to be demonstrated and
acknowledged in the exhibition and the
accompanying catalogue. Johanna Bürgi-Bigler
(1880-1938) was not only the first collector of
Klee's work, she also laid the foundations of the
largest private Klee collection in the world, which by
the late 1930s already amounted to more than 50
works. After her death her son Rolf Buergi
(1906-1967) continued to extend the collection.
Following Paul Klee's emigration to Berne from
Duesseldorf at the and of 1933, he and his wife Lily
formed a close friendship with Johanna
Bürgi-Bigler, and it was on her initiative that the
Kunsthalle Berne held the first major exhibition of
Klee's work in Switzerland in 1935. From 1933
onwards Rolf Bürgi supported the Klees as their
advisor in tax and financial matters, and after Paul
Klee's death he became a kind of private secretary
to Lily Klee. It was in this capacity that he arranged
the sale of Paul Klee's complete artistic estate to
the Berne collectors Hermann Rupf and Hans
Meyer-Benteli shortly before Lily Klee's death, to
prevent the works of art being converted into cash
for the benefit of the Allies, in line with the
Washington Agreement. In 1947 Bürgi, Rupf and
Meyer-Benteli, together with the architect Werner
Allenbach, founded the Paul Klee Foundation with
the art from Klee's estate. Since 1952 the
foundation has been based in the Kunstmuseum
Berne. The exhibition was initiated and first shown
in the Kunstmuseum Berne by Stefan Frey and
Josef Helfenstein. After Hamburg it will tour to the
Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art in Edinburgh
(12 August - 22 October 2000). A comprehensive
catalogue of the exhibition and a publication on the
Bürgi sketchbook have been published.
Hamburger Kunsthalle
Hamburg,
DE Germany