- Marjamshausen
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Born into a family of musicians, Paul Klee was an accomplished violinist. After much hesitation, he chose to study art. Alternately whimsical and spiritual, playful and rigorous, no other figure moved so effortlessly between such a variety of styles, subjects, and media as Klee. From 1898 to 1901, Klee studied in Munich, first with Heinrich Knirr, then at the Kunstakademie under Franz von Stuck. Next, Klee embarked on a series of trips abroad that nourished his visual sensibilities. After visiting Tunisia in 1914, he became entranced by color, which would become a dominant force of Klee's mature style. For the next 20 years, his paintings and watercolors showed a mastery of delicate, dreamlike color harmonies, which he manipulated to create flat, semi-abstract compositions.
This mosaic-like cityscape not only reveals his theoretical approach to color but also illustrates his skills as a draftsman. Klee taught at the Bauhaus, the most progressive arts and design school of the early 20th century, from 1921 to 1931. He was an eloquent writer, and his lectures, letters, and diaries—many published posthumously—have had a profound impact on artists and art theory.
Provenance Research Ongoing Exhibition HistoryMiss Ima Hogg, Inwood Manor, Houston, October 18, 1965.
Des Moines Art Center, September 18–October 28,1973.
"Bauhaus Color," The High Museum of Art, Atlanta, January 30–March 14, 1976; Museum of Fine Arts Houston, April 12–May 30, 1976; Fine Arts Gallery, San Diego, August 1–September 29, 1976.
"Direction and Diversity: Twentieth Century Art in the Museum Collection," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, May 21–September 3, 1988.
"A Piece of the Moon World: Paul Klee in Texas Collections," The Menil Collection, Houston, February 23–June 5, 1994.
"Klee and America," The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C., June 17–September 10, 2006; The Menil Collection, Houston, October 6–January 14, 2006.
"Paul Klee: Bauhaus Master," Fundacion Juan March, Madrid, March 22-June 30, 2013.
"Miss Ima Hogg & Modernism," Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, July 27–November 3, 2019.
"The Rise of Modernism: Europe and America," The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, Aug. 20, 2021 - Jan. 2, 2022. [Second Installation/Light-Sensitive Rotation: Kinder Building 207: No Catalog]
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