Guggenheim

Chaos and Classicis

22 Feb - 15 May 2011

Adolf Ziegler
The Four Elements: Fire, Water and Earth, Air
(Die vier Elemente, Feuer, Wasser und Erde, Luft)
antes de 1937
CHAOS AND CLASSICISM
art in France, Italy, Germany and Spain, 1918-1936
22 February - 15 May, 2011

An exhibition of paintings, sculpture, the decorative arts, and fashion produced between 1918 and 1936 in Italy, Germany, France, and Spain.The works included demonstrate a return to classicism at the heart of the avant-garde during this period of extraordinary creative activity marked by major political events that influenced, for better and for worse, creative thought.

Introduction

Following the chaos of World War I, a move emerged toward figuration, clean lines, and modeled form and away from the twodimensional abstracted spaces, fragmented compositions, and splintered bodies of Cubism, Futurism, Expressionism, and other avant-garde styles of the opening of the 20th century. In response to the horrors initiated by the new machine-age warfare, artists sought to recuperate and represent the body, whole and intact. For the next decade-and-a-half, classicism-a return to order, synthesis, organization, and enduring values, rather than the prewar emphasis on innovation at all costs-dominated the discourse of contemporary art.
Chaos and Classicism: Art in France, Italy, Germany, and Spain, 1918-1936 traces this interwar trend as it worked its way from a poetic, mythic idea in the Parisian avant-garde; to a political, historical idea of a revived Roman Empire, under Benito Mussolini; to a neo-Platonic High Modernism at the Bauhaus, and finally to the chilling aesthetic of nascent Nazi culture. The exhibition interweaves the key movements that proclaimed visual and
thematic clarity, Purism, Novecento Italiano, and Neue Sachlichkeit, through several closely related but distinct themes. The Bilbao presentation incorporates important examples of Spanish art that adhered to this classicizing mode. While Spain remained neutral during World War I, it was not immune to the political sea change wrought by the war. In 1931 the monarchy fell, and five years later the Spanish Civil War broke out.
This vast transformation of interwar aesthetics in Western Europe encompasses painting, sculpture, hotography, achitecture, film, fashion, and the decorative arts, and the show presents works by Balthus, Giorgio de Chirico, Jean Cocteau, Otto Dix, Pablo Gargallo, Hannah Höch, Fernand Léger, Henri Matisse, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, Pablo Picasso, and August Sander.
Chaos and Classicism is curated by Kenneth E. Silver, Guest Curator and Professor of Modern Art, New York University, assisted by Helen Hsu, Assistant Curator, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, with Vivien Greene, Curator of 19th- and Early-20th Century Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, as curatorial advisor.
 

Tags: Balthus, Giorgio de Chirico, Jean Cocteau, Otto Dix, Hannah Höch, Fernand Léger, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, August Sander