Kunstmuseum Bern

Adolf Wölfli

01 Feb - 18 May 2008

© Adolf Wölfli
"Katholische Geisteszentrale Rom", 1905
Bleistift auf Zeitungspapier
Adolf Wölfli-Stiftung, Kunstmuseum Bern
ADOLF WÖLFLI
"Adolf Wölfli Universe . A Retrospective"

01 February 2008 - 18 May 2008
Opening: Thursday, January 31 2008, 18h30

Today, Adolf Wölfli (1864-1930) is counted among the important artists of the 20th century. The exhibition presents Wölfli's personal and obsessive universe which is a unique reflection of the world he was excluded from.
At the beginning 20th century, Adolf Wölfli reinvented his own life on over 25,000 pages. First of all in the form of a spectacular childhood, then in a glorious future that he entitled "St. Adolf Giant Creation". He transformed his past as an orphan and "discarded" child, an abused servant, menial, migrant worker, prison inmate and ultimately as a patient in the Waldau Psychiatric Clinic near Bern. It was there, in 1895, on the advice of his doctors that he wrote the first of his life stories which were to expand over the following decades to include prose and poetry, music and compositions, numbers and drawings to become an endless narrative.

Radical Design for a New World

After God's creation, the St. Adolf Giant Creation was the second. Down to the smallest detail Wölfli describes how in the near future, thanks to infinite wealth, his nephew in real life, Rudolf, will buy the earth and the universe, urbanize and rename them. Wölfli himself becomes St. Adolf II and the focus of this creation. For the construction of St. Adolf Giant Creation, Wölfli quarries unashamedly from the outside world but substitutes the conventions and norms pertaining there with his own. Thus he has left us a highly personal work that at the same time is a unique reflection of our own world. Since his time, Wölfli's art has lost nothing of its radical nature, drama, humour and beauty.
The exhibition Adolf Wölfli Universe presents in heretofore unseen abundance Wölfli's art and world design. There are not only pictures, texts and music but also a projection which gives an exemplary introduction to the 8,000-page Trauer-Marsch (Funeral march) and to Wölfli's thought and work processes.

Curator: Daniel Baumann

Adolf Wölfli (born February 29, 1864 in Bowil, died November 6, 1930 in Bern) lived from 1895 until his death in the Waldau Psychiatric Clinic near Bern. During the more than thirty years of his residence there, he created a comprehensive body of work comprising about 1,500 drawings, 1,500 collages and 25,000 pages made into booklets. He is regarded as one of the most important representatives of Art Brut, or Outsider Art.
 

Tags: Daniel Baumann, Adolf Wölfli