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Swiss artist Sophie Taeuber-Arp (1889-1943) was a pioneer of
20th-century avant-garde. Remarkably versatile and immensely
gifted, she produced an oeuvre that encompasses the entire range of
the modernist movement from applied and fine art and dance to
architecture, interior design, and teaching. Equlibre, created in
1931, marks the beginning of Taeuber-Arp's career as an
accomplished painter. She moves away from figuration to focus on
shape and colour. Circle, square, and rectangle define her future
vocabulary. While in her earlier textiles she used multiple shades
and hues, she now reduces her palette to primary colours alongside
black and white, signalling a markedly changed sense of colour. The
painting's posthumous title emphasises Taeuber-Arp's constant
striving for an ideal balance of colour, shape, and indeed all the
elements in her paintings. From here, she sets out to explore
movement, circles, and spaces, and later gradations and lines.
Equilibre, a landmark of Taeuber-Arp's oeuvre, looks ahead to her
future subject matter, while at the same time referencing her
earlier work. Text in English and German.
Swiss artist Franz Gertsch, born 1930, is one of the most important
exponents of photorealism worldwide. Yet unlike many of his fellow
artists, he takes liberties when translating a photograph into one
of his large-format paintings or prints, thus animating his
depictions of human faces or landscapes. Ruschegg, created in 1988,
represents a landmark in Gertsch's oeuvre. It is both his first
attempt in woodcut for a landscape, and his first large-format work
in that genre. Abandoning painting for nearly a decade as of 1986,
he developed a special woodcut technique. Having worked in
portraiture almost exclusively for many years, Gertsch now begins
his exploration of nature. Starting from a view of his garden in
the Swiss village of Ruschegg, Gertsch singles out some of its
elements, such as a footpath, rocks, shrubs and trees, grass and
leaves, taking them as individual motifs first for woodcuts and
later for monumental 'portraits' of such pieces of nature. Thus,
Ruschegg also stands for Gertsch's movement away from the
representation of humans to that of nature, just as it links his
later work with the landscape studies of his early years. Text in
English and German.
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