Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich
Lot 125000990
Lot 125000990
125000990
Alexej von Jawlensky
Abstrakter Kopf: September, 1927.
Oil on structured wove paper, originally laid o...
Estimate:
€ 250,000 - 350,000
$ 290,000 - 406,000
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Alexej von Jawlensky
1864 - 1941
Abstrakter Kopf: September. 1927.
Oil on structured wove paper, originally laid on cardboard.
Lower left monogrammed and dated "IX 27" in the lower right. Dated "September 1927", titled and inscribed with the work number "N. 75". 43.3 x 32.6 cm (17 x 12.8 in).
Recorded on page 18 of Jawlensky's so-called 'Cahier Noir'.
• Symmetry, geometry, and abstraction: Jawlensky's “Abstract Heads” radically transcend classical portrait painting.
• “Abstract Heads” in such harmonious colors and of this museum quality are extremely rare on the international auction market.
• First exhibited in 1928 (Galerie Neue Kunst Fides, Dresden).
• Comparable works are in international museums like the Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main, the Kunstmuseum Basel, the Busch-Reisinger Museum of the Harvard Art Museums, and the Centre Pompidou, Paris.
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for more than 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Frankfurt Kunstkabinett Hanna Bekker vom Rath, Hofheim i. Taunus.
Private collection (acquired from the above in 1952).
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1984, Wolfgang Ketterer, Munich).
EXHIBITION: Paul Klee - A. v. Jawlensky, Galerie Neue Kunst Fides, Dresden, 1928, cat. no. 12.
Sonderausstellung. Blaue Vier (Lyonel Feininger, A. Jawlensky, W. Kandinsky, Paul Klee), Galerie Ferdinand Möller, Berlin, October 1929, issue 5, no. 89.
LITERATURE: Maria Jawlensky, Lucia Pieroni-Jawlensky, Angelica Jawlensky, Alexej von Jawlensky. Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, Vol. 2: 1914-1933, Munich 1992, CR no. 1272 (illustrated in color on p. 427).
Clemens Weiler, Jawlensky. Heads - Faces - Meditations, Hanau 1970, p. 144, CR no. 240.
- -
Galerie Wolfgang Ketterer, Munich, 87th auction, November 26/27, 1984, p. 122, lot 728 (illustrated in color).
“The face reveals the entire universe.”
Alexej von Jawlensky to Galka Scheyer (undated), quoted from Rosel Gollek, Der Blaue Reiter im Lenbachhaus München. Catalog of the collection in the Municipal Gallery (“Materialien zur Kunst des 19. Jahrhunderts 12”), Munich, 1974, p. 46.
1864 - 1941
Abstrakter Kopf: September. 1927.
Oil on structured wove paper, originally laid on cardboard.
Lower left monogrammed and dated "IX 27" in the lower right. Dated "September 1927", titled and inscribed with the work number "N. 75". 43.3 x 32.6 cm (17 x 12.8 in).
Recorded on page 18 of Jawlensky's so-called 'Cahier Noir'.
• Symmetry, geometry, and abstraction: Jawlensky's “Abstract Heads” radically transcend classical portrait painting.
• “Abstract Heads” in such harmonious colors and of this museum quality are extremely rare on the international auction market.
• First exhibited in 1928 (Galerie Neue Kunst Fides, Dresden).
• Comparable works are in international museums like the Städel Museum, Frankfurt am Main, the Kunstmuseum Basel, the Busch-Reisinger Museum of the Harvard Art Museums, and the Centre Pompidou, Paris.
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for more than 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Frankfurt Kunstkabinett Hanna Bekker vom Rath, Hofheim i. Taunus.
Private collection (acquired from the above in 1952).
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1984, Wolfgang Ketterer, Munich).
EXHIBITION: Paul Klee - A. v. Jawlensky, Galerie Neue Kunst Fides, Dresden, 1928, cat. no. 12.
Sonderausstellung. Blaue Vier (Lyonel Feininger, A. Jawlensky, W. Kandinsky, Paul Klee), Galerie Ferdinand Möller, Berlin, October 1929, issue 5, no. 89.
LITERATURE: Maria Jawlensky, Lucia Pieroni-Jawlensky, Angelica Jawlensky, Alexej von Jawlensky. Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, Vol. 2: 1914-1933, Munich 1992, CR no. 1272 (illustrated in color on p. 427).
Clemens Weiler, Jawlensky. Heads - Faces - Meditations, Hanau 1970, p. 144, CR no. 240.
- -
Galerie Wolfgang Ketterer, Munich, 87th auction, November 26/27, 1984, p. 122, lot 728 (illustrated in color).
“The face reveals the entire universe.”
Alexej von Jawlensky to Galka Scheyer (undated), quoted from Rosel Gollek, Der Blaue Reiter im Lenbachhaus München. Catalog of the collection in the Municipal Gallery (“Materialien zur Kunst des 19. Jahrhunderts 12”), Munich, 1974, p. 46.
In 1918, Jawlensky and Werefkin moved with their family to Ascona, in the southern region of Lake Maggiore, for health reasons. It was there that he began his series of “Abstract Heads” (1918–1935), which includes the present work. Three years later, after he had finally separated from Marianne von Werefkin, the artist returned to Germany, settling in Wiesbaden. At that time, many of his works were on display in a major retrospective traveling exhibition in Germany, with stops in Berlin, Hamburg, Hanover, Frankfurt am Main, Munich, and also in Wiesbaden, where the exhibition was met with great enthusiasm.
In his urge to engage in artistic experiments with variations in form and color, Jawlensky discovered his own principles of form design and serial work during these years, which later found their way into the artistic endeavors of many artists, among them Josef Albers and Andy Warhol.
Following on from his “Mystical Heads” and also as a refinement of his “Heilandsgesichter” (Saviour Faces), which were already far removed from portraiture, Jawlensky simplified, abstracted and stylised human facial features even more during these years: he developed an artistic formula for composing pictures, which he brought to life with the help of an almost incomprehensible wealth of colours and transformed into fascinating compositions. Anatomical features are transformed into geometric shapes and arranged in a nearly architectural manner, resulting in a highly reduced head shape: Jawlensky hints at a nose with a vertically placed line in the center.
Around it, there are individual straight, horizontal, and vertical lines, as well as slightly diagonal lines in bold, contrasting, yet harmonious color combinations, which form the forehead and the mouth. In contrast, wavy lines and an extensive semicircular line define the hair and the head's shape. The rest of the picture plane is exclusively filled with gently delineated areas of color. Delicate blue meets bold rosé and apricot meets rich green, combining with a wealth of bold, colorful lines to form a particularly harmonious whole. The structure is brought to life from above: a small sun on the right casts warm light on the upper half of the balanced composition, while the lower half of the picture lies in shadow, thus following Jawlensky's conviction that a divine order is expressed by an open, supernatural ‘above’ and a closed ‘below’ in this world.
“I painted in Wiesbaden for several years [...]. I was so focused on these works and wanted to achieve perfect and spiritual content. This resulted in some outstanding works.” (Alexej von Jawlensky, Lebenserinnerungen, 1937, in: Clemens Weiler, 1970, p. 119f.) This work, also created in Wiesbaden, is an exceptionally harmonious, balanced, and expressive ‘Abstract Head’ from the artist's important series. In a fascinating duality of light and shadow, line and surface, warmth and cold, the stylized face with contemplative, closed eyes radiates absolute stillness in ideal balance and weightlessly rests in itself. [CH]
In his urge to engage in artistic experiments with variations in form and color, Jawlensky discovered his own principles of form design and serial work during these years, which later found their way into the artistic endeavors of many artists, among them Josef Albers and Andy Warhol.
Following on from his “Mystical Heads” and also as a refinement of his “Heilandsgesichter” (Saviour Faces), which were already far removed from portraiture, Jawlensky simplified, abstracted and stylised human facial features even more during these years: he developed an artistic formula for composing pictures, which he brought to life with the help of an almost incomprehensible wealth of colours and transformed into fascinating compositions. Anatomical features are transformed into geometric shapes and arranged in a nearly architectural manner, resulting in a highly reduced head shape: Jawlensky hints at a nose with a vertically placed line in the center.
Around it, there are individual straight, horizontal, and vertical lines, as well as slightly diagonal lines in bold, contrasting, yet harmonious color combinations, which form the forehead and the mouth. In contrast, wavy lines and an extensive semicircular line define the hair and the head's shape. The rest of the picture plane is exclusively filled with gently delineated areas of color. Delicate blue meets bold rosé and apricot meets rich green, combining with a wealth of bold, colorful lines to form a particularly harmonious whole. The structure is brought to life from above: a small sun on the right casts warm light on the upper half of the balanced composition, while the lower half of the picture lies in shadow, thus following Jawlensky's conviction that a divine order is expressed by an open, supernatural ‘above’ and a closed ‘below’ in this world.
“I painted in Wiesbaden for several years [...]. I was so focused on these works and wanted to achieve perfect and spiritual content. This resulted in some outstanding works.” (Alexej von Jawlensky, Lebenserinnerungen, 1937, in: Clemens Weiler, 1970, p. 119f.) This work, also created in Wiesbaden, is an exceptionally harmonious, balanced, and expressive ‘Abstract Head’ from the artist's important series. In a fascinating duality of light and shadow, line and surface, warmth and cold, the stylized face with contemplative, closed eyes radiates absolute stillness in ideal balance and weightlessly rests in itself. [CH]
125000990
Alexej von Jawlensky
Abstrakter Kopf: September, 1927.
Oil on structured wove paper, originally laid o...
Estimate:
€ 250,000 - 350,000
$ 290,000 - 406,000
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
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