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Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele PDF

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Preview Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele

SCHIELE Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library and Archives http://www.archive.org/details/gustavklimtegonsOOmess GLSTAV RLIMT mi EGIN SC II1ELE THE SOLOMON R. GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM, NEW YORK Published by TheSolomon R.Guggenheim Foundation, Neiv York, 1965—All Rights Reserved—Library ofCongress CardCatalogue Number65—16678 Printed in Austria THK SOI.OMOX R. GUGGENHEIM FOUNDATION TRUSTEES HARRY E. GUGGENHEIM, PRESIDENT ALBERT E.THIELE, VICE PRESIDENT H. H.ARNASON,VICE PRESIDENT, ARTADMINISTRATION ELEANOR, COUNTESS CASTLE STEWART DANA DRAPER PETER O.LAWSON-.TOHNSTON CHAUNCEY NEWLIN A. MRS.HENRY OBRE DANIELCATTONRICH MICHAELP.WETTACH MEDLEY G. B.WHELPLEY CARLZIGROSSER 1 \IITi; llilHT THE i:\illltlTISI\ Gustav Klimt has never had a significant one-man exhibition in an American museum. Egon Schiele was seen importantly in American museums only once when Boston's Institute of Contemporary Art presented a one-man show which — subsequently travelled during the season of 1960 61. The current effort which groups together the two Austrian masters is by far the most ambitious among contemporary presentations. Works by the younger Schiele were borrowed from sources throughout the world and only a few refusals of importance have been sustained. With the massive help of private and public collections in Austria, the United States and in other countries, the Schiele retrospective is made up of major works from all periods. Klimt too is shown through kev works but not in comparable fullness. This limitation is, in part, enforced by external conditions and partly arrived at through deliberate decision. Some owners of important works felt obliged to decline our requests for Klimt's paintings for fear that the frail and vulnerable canvases of the Art Nouveau master would suffer through a transatlantic shipment. It was by choice, however, that Klimt is here presented substantially only through works dated after 1900 and that no effort was made to gather his earlier work. Revealing as such inclusions would have been, a selection so conceived would have favored an historic rather than an esthetic point of view. This would have been contrary to our intentions. Consideration has also been given to a more comprehensive showing of Austrian art that might have included the still shadowy figure of Richard Gerstl. and above all, Oscar Kokoschka, the third and most famous member of the Austrian triad. This concept was abandoned, however, because Kokoschka might well become the subject of a full retrospective one-man exhibition at a future date. — It is therefore the distinct but related art ofGustav Klimt and ofEgon Schiele the former seen primarily through his late work, the latter retrospectively, and both — through their drawings as well as their paintings that is presented here to the American public through a single showing at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Thomas M. Messer, Director imnwmiiiui This exhibition and tiie preparation for the accompanying catalogue have been in the making for the past four rears. The many inherent difficulties could be overcome only because the initiatory effort of the Guggenheim Museum received the full and generous cooperation of government and museum officials, scholars, collectors, and dealers in Austria, the United States, and in a number of other countries. Central to this effort was the unstinting help given by Professor Dr. Fritz Novotny, Director of the Osterreichische Galerie in I ienna, who was first to commit a number ofimportant worksfrom his Museum's permanent collection and who persuaded some ofthe most important Austrian Klimt and Schiele collectors to support the Guggenheim Museum's exhibition through loans ofgreat importance. Through its staff, the Oster- reichische Galerie. with the extensive aidofDr. Klaus Demus, also acted as an Austrian gathering point arid arranged for the punctual arrival of previously selected ivorks. As the following lenders' list indicates, other Austrian museums, through their directors and staffs, seconded the support initially received through generous loan arrangements and through a variety ofhelpful acts. The same may be said ofgalleries and individual lenders in Vienna and in other parts of the Austrian Republic. Among these, the participation of the Klimt oivner Mrs. Marietta Preleuthner, the Schiele specialist Dr. Rudolf Leopold, and of Mr. and Mrs. I iktor Fogarassy, who have assembled the most extensive private collection of the two Austrian masters must be specially noted, if only because their combined participation supplementing museum loans assured a desirably broad basisfor the exhibition, hi addition to those here mentioned or subsequently listed, the anonymous but decisive aid of the Austrian Ministry of Education is herewith most gratefully acknowledged. In this country, interest in Klimt and Schiele has been consistentlyfurthered through the pioneering efforts of the Galerie St. Etienne in Neiv York. Its director, Dr. Otto Kallir, has not only contributed works by both artists from his own collection and that of the Galerie. but also has made available to the Guggenheim Museum records without which some ivorks of primary importance could not have been located or obtained. Outside ofAustria and the UnitedStates, sizeable loan contributions have been obtained from the Narodni Galeriein Prague andthrough Marlborough Fine Art Ltd. in London who have graciously assisted us in the preparation ofsome colorplates. A thorough documentation could not have been secured for this catalogue without the specialized knowledge ofKlimt and Schiele scholars. Our thanks, in this respect, must first go to Dr. Johannes Dobai, Zurich, who contributed relevant portions from the documentary section of his as ret unpublished Gustav Klimt. An analogous service for the Schiele documentation has been performed by Dr. Otto Kallir who, under the name ofOtto Nirenstein, hadpublished in 1930 thefirst catalogue raisonnee ofSchiele's paintings from ivhose pages we quoted at will. Material due to be published in an updated and English version was also placed at our disposal by the author. The lenders themselves, and notably Professor Dr. Fritz Novotny have cooperated by furnishing valuable information relating to ivorks in their possession. Finally, the documentation of the catalogue was enriched by Miss Sandra Comini who engaged in a recent and fruitfulsearchfor new clueson Schiele. Miss Comini allowed meto readher unpublished thesis Egon Schiele, The Artist's Vision of Himself and to incorporate in various parts of this catalogue such findings as seemed pertinent to our purposes. Also, catalogue essays have been written by Dr. Johannes Dobai, Miss Sandra Comini ami Professor James T. Demetrion, Curator of the Pasadena Art Museum. Dr. Dobai's essay on Klimt is rendered here in the carefully considered translation of Dr. Avram Kampf and Miss Winifred Mason. I lastly wish to acknowledge the most diligent efforts of this Museum's staff and particularly the extensive editorial and research ivork contributed toward the exhibition and the catalogue by Dr. Louise Averill Svendsen, Associate Curator, and by Miss Linda Konheim. T. M. M.

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