Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich
Lot 125000991
Lot 125000991
125000991
Alexej von Jawlensky
Mystischer Kopf: Trotz, Um 1918.
Oil on cardboard
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
Mystischer Kopf: Trotz. Um 1918.
Oil on cardboard.
Inscribed “N. 32, 1918,” “M.K,” “A.v.Jawlensky / Dumont Schuburg Verlag / Page 244 No. 240” (in black paintbrush) as well as “Trotz” and “1918” (ballpoint pen) on the reverse by a hand other than the artist’s). 40.8 x 30.4 cm (16 x 11.9 in).
• Maximum Expressionism: free play of color, contour, and surface.
• Extreme expression in a radically reduced formal language.
• Is this also Emmy “Galka” Scheyer? — The woman who inspired Jawlensky to create the “Mystical Heads” series beginning in 1917.
• A comparable painting from this series is in the collection of the Kunstmuseum Basel (“Mystical Head: Girl's Head (Frontal),” 1918).
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Artist's estate.
Private collection, Locarno.
Private collection, Munich.
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1985).
EXHIBITION: Galerie Otto Stangl, Munich, September 4 - October 8, 1956 (illustrated).
LITERATURE: Maria Jawlensky, Lucia Pieroni-Jawlensky, Angelica Jawlensky, Alexej Jawlensky. Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, vol. II: 1914-1933, Munich 1992, CR no. 981 (illustrated in black and white).
Clemens Weiler, Alexej Jawlensky, Cologne 1959, CR no. 240 (illustrated in black and white on p. 244).
Alexej von Jawlensky, quoted from: Tayfun Belgin, Alexej von Jawlensky. Eine Künstlerbiographie, Heidelberg 1998, p. 103.
1864 - 1941
Mystischer Kopf: Trotz. Um 1918.
Oil on cardboard.
Inscribed “N. 32, 1918,” “M.K,” “A.v.Jawlensky / Dumont Schuburg Verlag / Page 244 No. 240” (in black paintbrush) as well as “Trotz” and “1918” (ballpoint pen) on the reverse by a hand other than the artist’s). 40.8 x 30.4 cm (16 x 11.9 in).
• Maximum Expressionism: free play of color, contour, and surface.
• Extreme expression in a radically reduced formal language.
• Is this also Emmy “Galka” Scheyer? — The woman who inspired Jawlensky to create the “Mystical Heads” series beginning in 1917.
• A comparable painting from this series is in the collection of the Kunstmuseum Basel (“Mystical Head: Girl's Head (Frontal),” 1918).
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Artist's estate.
Private collection, Locarno.
Private collection, Munich.
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1985).
EXHIBITION: Galerie Otto Stangl, Munich, September 4 - October 8, 1956 (illustrated).
LITERATURE: Maria Jawlensky, Lucia Pieroni-Jawlensky, Angelica Jawlensky, Alexej Jawlensky. Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings, vol. II: 1914-1933, Munich 1992, CR no. 981 (illustrated in black and white).
Clemens Weiler, Alexej Jawlensky, Cologne 1959, CR no. 240 (illustrated in black and white on p. 244).
Alexej von Jawlensky, quoted from: Tayfun Belgin, Alexej von Jawlensky. Eine Künstlerbiographie, Heidelberg 1998, p. 103.
The series that Alexej Jawlensky began while exiled in Switzerland reveals surprising aspects of the painterly realization of his motifs. Following the variations of his "View from the Window," which had a profound impact on his artistic program, Jawlensky began experimenting with mystical heads in October 1917. In doing so, he seemed to draw on the colorful expressive heads from the years before World War I, such as “Head in Wine Red and Green” (ca. 1913), reimagining them in a more individualized yet stylized monumentality: Heads that Jawlensky subordinates to his radical style, using physiognomies from his own modular system, and reducing their characterization to open or closed eyes, color accents, clearly defined bridges of the nose, thin mouths, hairline, and rouge cheeks. The pictorial design is accomplished exclusively through color fields that do not convey any sense of space. The striking colors, combined with the precisely placed lines of the mouth, eyes, and surrounding black, convey a sense of “defiance.” Jawlensky's quest to transfigure the spiritual in the human face using shapes and colors found its first prominent expression in the “Mystical Heads.” Jawlensky continued this approach in his subsequent series of “Heilandgesichter” (Saviour Faces) and ‘Christusköpfe’ (Christ Heads). However, the individual expressiveness is more pronounced in the series of the “Mystical Heads”. [EH]
125000991
Alexej von Jawlensky
Mystischer Kopf: Trotz, Um 1918.
Oil on cardboard
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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