Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
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PROPERTY FROM THE COLLECTION OF HENRY S. ROSENTHAL
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)

Aq. 34. Aquarell Fallmann-Springer

细节
Kurt Schwitters (1887-1948)
Aq. 34. Aquarell Fallmann-Springer
signed, dated and titled 'Aquarell Fallmann-Springer K. Schwitters. 1919. Aq. 34.' (on the artist's mount)
watercolor and pencil on paper
Image size: 9 7/8 x 7 ½ in. (25 x 19.1 cm.)
Mount size: 13 x 10 5/8 in. (33 x 27 cm.)
Executed in 1919
来源
Dr. Fritz Glaser, Dresden (probably acquired from the artist, by 1956).
Dr. Volkmar Glaser, Freudenstadt (by descent from the above); sale, Stuttgarter Kunstkabinett, 20-21 November 1959, lot 910.
Richard L. Feigen Gallery, Chicago (1960).
Private collection (acquired from the above).
Gift from the above to the family of the present owner, December 1976.
出版
K. Orchard and I. Schulz, eds., Kurt Schwitters: Catalogue raisonné, 1905-1922, Ostfildern, 2000, vol. 1, p. 256, no. 545 (illustrated).

拍品专文

Affiliated with the Dadaist and Constructivist movements following World War I, Fallman Springer belongs to a series of about forty “Dadaist” watercolors executed in 1919-1920. Referring to this distinct genre, John Elderfield has written, “Some are purely abstract; one is almost straightforwardly realistic. The majority, however, introduce into Schwitters’ visual work for the first—and with few exceptions the last—time a fantastic, and at times almost insane, subject-matter of windmills, buckets, trains, fish, churches, houses and pin-figures, which together form a chaotic, invented world. Women are transformed into bottles, upside-down figures stroll like flies along ceilings, houses and churches row pigs’ tails and change into little trains which slide over crudely drawn cog-wheels and down steeply inclined lines of force” (Kurt Schwitters, exh. cat., The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1985, p. 45).

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