Dynamisch-statischer Conflict
Artist/Maker
Paul Klee
(German, born in Switzerland, 1879–1940)
Date1925
MediumPen and black ink on paper board
DimensionsOverall: 7 × 9 in. (17.8 × 22.9 cm)
Credit LineGift of Katharine Kuh in honor of Ellen H. Johnson
Object number1975.6
Status
Not on viewKlee's connection with the Bauhaus from 1920-35 is reflected in the precise, constructivist style of this drawing. The bizarre, whirring, machine-like figures take cues from Picabia and other artists' images of industrialized objects. In a famous lecture presented in Jena, one year before this drawing was executed, Klee discussed the interactions of "static and dynamic parts of a pictorial mechanism," a pair of binary oppositions which were part of a larger philosophy that informed his work. Klee's artistic forms resulted from his dynamic processes and revealing or "making visible," as he put it, the inner meanings and structures of the natural world.
Exhibition History
The Child's Eye: From Klee to Disney
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (May 5, 1981 - August 1, 1981 )
Love, Glory and Guns: Images of Peace and War from the Permanent Collection
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (October 3, 1986 - November 16, 1986 )
Katharine Kuh: Interpreting the New
- Archives of American Art, Washington, DC (December 13, 1994 - March 13, 1995 )
- The Gibson Gallery, State University of New York, Postdam (March 24, 1995 - April 16, 1995 )
Dreams and Visions: Expressing the Inexplicable
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (September 9, 1997 - October 19, 1997 )
"To Make Things Visible": Art in the Shadow of World War I
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (February 3, 2009 - June 7, 2009 )
Collections
- Modern & Contemporary
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19th century
late 18th century