Georg Baselitz: Works on Paper / Kunstmuseum Basel

On the occasion of his 80th birthday, the Kunstmuseum Basel honors the German painter Georg Baselitz with an exhibition that showcases a representative survey of his drawings and colored graphic art from the museum’s Kupferstichkabinett (Department of Prints and Drawings). The longstanding friendship between Baselitz and the Kunstmuseum Basel goes back to 1970, when Dieter Koepplin, then the director of the Kupferstichkabinett, boosted the 32-year-old artist’s career by organizing a first exhibition of his drawings. The Kupferstichkabinett now has a sizable ensemble of 152 of Baselitz’s finest drawings and watercolors. The exhibition presents a selection of ca. 88 works from the museum’s holdings as well as 15 more recent pieces on loan from the artist. The exhibition at Kunstmuseum Basel | Neubau runs until April 29, 2018.

Georg Baselitz: Works on Paper / Kunstmuseum Basel. Introduction by Anita Haldemann, curator of the exhibition and Head of the Kupferstichkabinett (Department of Prints and Drawings) at Kunstmuseum Basel. Basel (Switzerland), January 31, 2018.

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Press text:

On occasion of his eightieth birthday, the Kunstmuseum Basel honors Georg Baselitz (b. Jan 23, 1938), one of the most distinguished figures in German postwar art. Concurrent with a focused retrospective of his oeuvre at the Fondation Beyeler, our exhibition showcases a representative survey of his drawings and colored graphic art from the museum’s Kupferstichkabinett (Department of Prints and Drawings).

Baselitz was trained as a painter at the Academies of Arts in East and West Berlin. In the context of German postwar art’s stern emphasis on abstraction, his insistence on a highly expressive and realistic figuration could not but be perceived as a provocation.

Baselitz’s meteoric career took off in the mid-1960s, when he painted pictures that scandalized critics and audiences and published hallucinatory “Pandemonic Manifestos.” He cultivated his public image and featured “new heroes” in his work. This process culminated in his decision, in 1969, to turn his pictures upside down, a simple act that stripped them of their conventional content. Confronting the beholder’s eye with color and form as such without distracting it with subject matter, the inverted canvases were a way for the painter to avoid abandoning figuration altogether.

Older and new works

The evolution of Baselitz’s art is especially evident in his drawings, which show him developing his ideas in an intuitive and unrestrained creative flow. His most recent works are characterized by his limber mastery of the medium and bear witness to his musings on mortality, but also look back on his own large and multifaceted oeuvre. He revisits central themes in his paintings and crucial sources of inspiration such as Marcel Duchamp.

The longstanding friendship between Baselitz and the Kunstmuseum Basel goes back to 1970, when Dieter Koepplin, then the director of the Kupferstichkabinett, boosted the 32-year-old artist’s career by organizing a first exhibition of his drawings. Twenty-five sheets from the show entered the museum’s holdings, the basis of a collection enlarged in the 1980s by the addition of outstanding works in connection with the exhibition Georg Baselitz. Drawings 1958–1983. The artist, for his part, complemented these and subsequent acquisitions by generously donating several works, helping the museum build a well-rounded collection of his art.

The Kupferstichkabinett now has a sizable ensemble of 152 of Baselitz’s finest drawings and watercolors. The exhibition presents a selection of ca. 88 works from the museum’s holdings as well as 15 more recent pieces on loan from the artist.

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