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All products Paul Klee • Products of the topic Cushions
REF : COUS-PK-01
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99,00 €
Dimensions : 45 x 45 cm.
90% cotton, 5% Polyester.
Since 1878 Jules Pansu has been creating and weaving collections of textil products for home decoration. In 1994, Jules Pansu launched a collection
of Home accessories created in its mill of Flanders by the «Best Craftmen in France» (Meilleurs Ouvriers de France) who perpetuate the art of weaving on jacquard looms.
Additional cultural and artistic information about the artist
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Senecio, Two dromedaries and a donkey, Park near Lu, Blue night, The Niesen, Small pine frame
First constructivist, it gradually moves towards a soft abstraction where landscapes are expressed in harmonious geometric forms.
His inspirations are numerous. Passionate about drawing from a young age, he is influenced by both artists from the Italian Renaissance and by the Impressionists he meets in Paris in 1905... But also by the works of Corot, Ensor, as well as Goya and Velasquez. The synthesis he will make in his painting is also diverse!
When Gropius calls him to Weimar to teach, he finds an entire generation of abstract painters and theorists at the Bauhaus.
Beyond shapes and colors, Paul Klee's work exudes a humanity, a spirituality that makes him unique, both in his time and in the Western world.
Paul Klee, sometimes considered the first surrealist, more for his approach than his painting, paved the way for the next generation. Delaunay, inspired by Klee's writings, continued the German painter's research.
Paul Klee was born on December 18, 1879, in Switzerland. After several years perfecting his painting skills, he discovered the works of Van Gogh and then those of Cézanne, the "master par excellence".
In 1911, he met the artists of the "Blaue Reiter".
The following three years marked a crucial turning point in Klee's work and his approach to painting, but he was mobilized from 1916 to 1918.
His reputation grew after the war. Having become a professor at the Bauhaus, alongside his friend Kandinsky, he participated in the first surrealist exhibition in Paris in 1925. He left the Bauhaus in 1931 for the Düsseldorf Academy. Two years later, he was dismissed under pressure from the Nazis.
Devastated, Paul Klee took refuge in his hometown, Berne. However, his health deteriorated rapidly. In 1937, Braque and Picasso traveled to Berne to visit him. Klee's works belonging to German public collections were confiscated; seventeen of them were featured in the "degenerate art" exhibition in Munich.
On June 29, 1940, Paul Klee died from paralysis of the heart muscle.
(c) Natacha PELLETIER for PASSION ESTAMPES
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