Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Property from the Estate of Dr. George S. Heyer, Jr.
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)

Ohne Titel (Sichtbar)

Details
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Ohne Titel (Sichtbar)
signed 'Kurt Schwitters.' (on the artist's mount)
brush and inkwash and paper collage on paper
Image size: 6 ½ x 5 ¼ in. (16.5 x 13.2 cm.)
Mount size: 11 1/8 x 7 ¾ in. (28.4 x 20 cm.)
Executed in 1926-1928
Provenance
Ernst Schwitters, Lysaker (by descent from the artist).
Marlborough Fine Art, Ltd., London (on consignment from above, 1963-1973).
Acquired by the late owner, circa 1980.
Literature
K. Orchard and I. Schulz, eds., Kurt Schwitters: Catalogue raisonné, 1923-1936, Ostfildern, 2003, vol. 2, p. 219, no. 1469 (illustrated).
Exhibited
Venice, XXX Esposizione Internationale d'Arte, June-October 1960, p. 147, no. 34 (dated 1922).
São Paulo, Museu de Arte Moderna, Kurt Schwitters, VI Bienal de São Paulo, 1961, p. 42, no. 35 (dated 1922-1923).
London, Marlborough Fine Art, Ltd.; Cologne, Wallraf-Richartz-Museum und Kölnischer Kunstverein; Rotterdam, Museum Boymans-van Beuningen and Milan, Toninelli Arte Moderna, Schwitters, March 1963-May 1964, nos. 82 (London), 83 (Cologne and Rotterdam) and 41 (Milan).
Los Angeles, University of California, UCLA Art Galleries; New York, Marlborough-Gerson Gallery, Inc. and Kansas City, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art; Kurt Schwitters: Retrospective, March-August 1965, p. 22, no. 64 (dated 1923).
Dallas Museum of Fine Arts; San Francisco Museum of Art and City Art Museum of Saint Louis, Kurt Schwitters: A Retrospective Exhibition, November 1965-April 1966, p. 56, no. 58 (dated 1923).
Dusseldorf, Städtische Kunsthalle; Berlin, Akademie der Künste; Staatsgalerie Stuttgart; Kunsthalle Basel and Kunstverein Hamburg, Kurt Schwitters, January-November 1971, p. 34, no. 121 (dated 1923).
London, Marlborough Fine Art, Ltd.; Zurich, Malborough Galerie; New York, Marlborough Gallery; Rome, Marlborough Galleria d'Arte and Vienna, Museum des 20. Jahrhunderts, Kurt Schwitters, October 1972-December 1973, p. 22, no. 29 (illustrated, p. 54; dated 1923).
Boston, Institute of Contemporary Art and Fort Worth Art Museum, Dada: Berlin, Cologne, Hannover, November 1980-April 1981 (dated 1923).

Lot Essay

“I felt myself freed and had to shout my jubilation out to the world. Out of parsimony I took whatever I found to do this, because we were now a poor country. One can even shout out through refuse, and this is what I did, nailing and gluing it together. I called it ‘Merz,’ it was a prayer about the victorious end of the war, victorious as once again peace had won in the end; everything had broken down in any case and new things had to be made out of fragments: and this is Merz. I painted, nailed, glued, composed poems, and experienced the world in Berlin” (Kurt Schwitters, 1930, quoted in W. Schmalenbach, Kurt Schwitters, New York, 1967, p. 96).
“Merz,” a made-up word which takes its name from a fragment of the words “Kommerz und Privatbank,” was an artistic revolution in which art and life were to be merged through the “business” of assembling fragments and detritus of modern life into new glorified forms and expressions of the triumph of the human spirit. As Schwitters’ friend and neighbor in Hanover, Kate Steinitz, recalled, during this period Schwitters was frequently to be seen on the streets of Hanover, “a crazy, original genius-character, carelessly dressed, absorbed in his own thoughts, picking up all sorts of curious stuff in the streets... always getting down from his bike to pick up some colourful piece of paper that somebody had thrown away” (K.T. Steinitz, Kurt Schwitters: A Portrait from Life, Berkeley, 1968, p. 68). From these fragments, Schwitters constructed poetic and miraculous constellations that expressed a new formal language and seemed to hint at a hidden order among the apparent chaos of the times.
Executed in 1926-1928, Ohne Titel (Sichtbar) is an early Merz collage made at a time of hyper-inflation, revolution and counter-revolution in Germany following the end of the First World War. In this era of complete moral, political and financial bankruptcy, when paper currency had lost its value and only food, work or lodging remained commodities of real value (other than gold or foreign currency), Schwitters, alone in Hanover, established his own one-man avant-garde and “cure” for the current age which he declared to be the “Merz” revolution.

More from Impressionist and Modern Art Works on Paper

View All
View All