Eugen Schönebeck
22 Feb - 15 May 2011
Eugen schönebeck,
Mao Tse-Tung, 1965,
Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010
Fotografie: Archiv Museum Frieder Burda
Mao Tse-Tung, 1965,
Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2010
Fotografie: Archiv Museum Frieder Burda
EUGEN SCHÖNEBECK
1957-1967
22 February - 15 May, 2011
The Schirn Kunsthalle is devoting an extensive retrospective to German painter Eugen Schönebeck, featuring almost all of his surviving paintings and the most important drawings. Starting out with Tachist drawing, Schönebeck turned to figurative drawing and painting, and was one of the first German artists to take up the traumatic experiences of the Second World War as a theme. He created unique works, combining the abstract and the figurative. In 1961 and 1962 he and Georg Baselitz pilloried the bourgeois, jaded art world in their publication of the Pandemonic Manifestos.
Schönebeck’s growing awareness of Soviet intellectualism in the former German Democratic Republic inspired him in the mid-1960s to create timeless portraits of various “Heroes of the East,” none of which were produced for propaganda purposes. In these pictures, Schönebeck not only scrutinized the character and behavior of revolutionaries such as Lenin, Trotzky, and Mao, but also the significance of the artist’s willingness to take risks. Schönebeck’s paintings and drawings were indeed ahead of their time, and to this very day, the issues they deal with have retained their topicality.
Curator: Pamela Kort, Berlin
1957-1967
22 February - 15 May, 2011
The Schirn Kunsthalle is devoting an extensive retrospective to German painter Eugen Schönebeck, featuring almost all of his surviving paintings and the most important drawings. Starting out with Tachist drawing, Schönebeck turned to figurative drawing and painting, and was one of the first German artists to take up the traumatic experiences of the Second World War as a theme. He created unique works, combining the abstract and the figurative. In 1961 and 1962 he and Georg Baselitz pilloried the bourgeois, jaded art world in their publication of the Pandemonic Manifestos.
Schönebeck’s growing awareness of Soviet intellectualism in the former German Democratic Republic inspired him in the mid-1960s to create timeless portraits of various “Heroes of the East,” none of which were produced for propaganda purposes. In these pictures, Schönebeck not only scrutinized the character and behavior of revolutionaries such as Lenin, Trotzky, and Mao, but also the significance of the artist’s willingness to take risks. Schönebeck’s paintings and drawings were indeed ahead of their time, and to this very day, the issues they deal with have retained their topicality.
Curator: Pamela Kort, Berlin