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entrance to Louisiana Museum |
I was recently introduced to a new-to-me painter,
Gabriele Münter (1877-1962), in a retrospective of her multi-faceted works at the
Louisiana Collection, just north of Copenhagen.
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Red Vase, 1909 |
This is a most fortunate coincidence, as the
12 by the dozen group (to which I once belonged) has chosen this artist to inspire their current quarterly challenge, due at the end of August.
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Head of a Young Boy, 1909 |
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Head of a Young Girl, 1908 |
Münter is best-known for her association with Wassily Kandinsky, with whom she co-founded the
Blaue Reiter group of artists. She wrote,
"In many people's eyes, I was only an unnecessary companion of Kandinsky.... That a woman can have an original and genuine talent and be a creative person in her own right – one tends to forget that."
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Mill at Lake Iseo, 1946 |
The show's catalog reads,
"Through ten themes and more than 130 works – many of which have never been shown before – we here experience Gabriele Münter as an open, experimental artist who does not fit easily into any specific art-historical 'isms'."
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View from the Window in Sèvres, 1906 |
Münter traveled widely, and her life was relatively unrestricted for a woman of her generation. Orphaned as a young adult, she inherited enough from her parents' estate that she could visit the United States, recording her travels with a camera. Her photos showed an exceptional talent for composition, and she was later able to attend art school.
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Main Street in Murnau with Horse and Cart, 1933 |
I would speculate that one of the reasons Münter is not better known is that the style of her paintings ranged widely throughout her 60-year career, depending on her subject. Viewers of art like to be able to identify an artist's work, and a consistency of style allows them to confirm their discrimination. Today we call this "branding".
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Olga von Hartmann, c. 1910 |
It is gratifying to see more attention being given to the work of women artists, at the Louisiana Museum and elsewhere. The exhibition continues until August 19, 2018.
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View from the sculpture garden of the Louisiana,
with the coast of Sweden in the distance. |
2 comments:
I love Munter's work. I learned about her when a friend gave me a book her aunt wrote called, Saving Kandinsky. You might enjoy reading it. You learn a lot about the time period, her life as an artist, and her relationship with Kandinsky.
Thanks for this, Vickie. I will see if I can track down that book.
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