There is an exhibition at the Tate Modern of
the work of Paul Klee. He spoke and wrote as well as he painted. Herewith a
video from the Tate about his work.
He wrote about his work and of his views
about his work, including a piece entitled “Ways of Studying Nature”
"For the artist, dialogue with nature
remains a conditio sine qua non. The artist is a man, himself
nature and part of nature in natural space.
But the ways that this man pursues both in
his production and in the related study of nature may vary, both in number and
in kind, according to his view of his own position in the natural space.
The ways often seem very new, though
fundamentally they may not be new at all. Only their combination is new, or
else they are really new in comparison with the number and character of
yesterday's ways. But to be new as against yesterday is still revolutionary,
even if it does not shake the immense old world. There is no need to disparage
the joy of novelty; though a clear view of history should save us from
desperately searching for novelty at the cost of naturalness.
Paul Klee 1911 |
Accordingly, a sense of totality has
gradually entered into the artist's conception of the natural object, whether
this object be plant, animal, or man whether it be situated in the space of the
house, the landscape, or the world, and the first consequence is that a more
spatial conception of the object as such is born.
The object grows beyond its appearance
through our knowledge of its inner being, through the knowledge that the thing is
more than its outward aspect suggests. Man dissects the thing and visualises
its inside with the help of plane sections; the character of the object is
built up according to the number and kind of sections that are needed. This is
visible penetration, to some extend that of a simple knife, to some extent
helped by finer instruments which make the material structure or material
function clear to us.
The sum of such experience enables the
"I" to draw inferences about the inner object from the optic-physical
phenomenon produces feelings which can transform outward impression into
functional penetration more or less elaborately, according to their direction.
Anatomy becomes physiology.
But there are other ways of looking into the
object which go still farther, which lead to a humanisation of the object and
create, between the "I" and the object, a resonance surpassing all
optical foundations. There is the non-optical way of intimate physical contact,
earthbound, that reaches the eye of the artist from below, and there is the
non-optical contact through the cosmic bond that descends from above.
It must be emphasised that intensive study
leads to experiences which concentrate and simplify the processes of which we
have been speaking. For the sake of clarification I might add that the lower
way leads through the realm of the static and produces static forms, while the
upper way leads through the realm of the dynamic.
Along the lower way, gravitating towards the
centre of the earth, lie the problems of static equilibrium, that may be
characterised by the words: "To stand despite all possibility of
falling". We are led to the upper ways by yearning to free ourselves from
earthly bonds; by swimming and flying, we free ourselves from constraint in
pure mobility.
All ways meet in the eye and there, turned
into form, lead to a synthesis of outward sight and inward vision. It is here
that constructions are formed which, although deviating totally from the
optical image of an object yet, from an overall point of view, do not
contradict it.
Through the experience that he has gained in
the different ways and translated into work, the student of Nature demonstrates
the progress of his dialogue with the natural object. His growth in the vision
and contemplation of nature enables him to rise towards a metaphysical view of
the world and to form free abstract structures which surpass schematic
intention and achieve a new naturalness, the naturalness of the work."
Paul
Klee, Untitled (The Angel of Death)
Painted
in the last year of his life 1940
|
No comments:
Post a Comment