Sale: 410 / Post War/ Contemporary Art, Dec. 07. 2013 in Munich Lot 748

 

748
Bernard Schultze
Waghalsige Konstruktion, 1992.
Chalk drawing
Estimate:
€ 9,000 / $ 9,630
Sold:
€ 5,375 / $ 5,751

(incl. surcharge)
Waghalsige Konstruktion. 1992.
Black Chalk drawing.
Signed, dated and titled lower right and on stretcher. On wove paper, laid on thin canvas. 226,7 x 137 cm (89,2 x 53,9 in).

This work is registered in the artist's hand-written index of works. We are grateful to Doris Schultze-Berger, Cologne, for her kind support in cataloging this work.

PROVENANCE: Acquired directly from artist.
Private collection Hesse.

EXHIBITION: Bernard Schultze - Das große Format, travelling exhibition Museum Ludwig, Josef-Haubrich-Kunsthalle Cologne, Galleria Comunale d'Arte Moderna Bologna, Kunsthalle Elzenveld Antwerp 1994/96.
Museum Ludwig in Wäino Aaltonen Museum of Art, Turku/Finland 1997.
Museum Folkwang, Essen.
Kunsthalle Hansestadt Rostock, 2005 (with stamped label on stretcher as well as with typographically inscribed sticker).

Bernard Schultze was born on 31 May in Schneidemühl (West Prussia). After his Abitur he studied at the art academies in Berlin and Düsseldorf from 1934 to 1939. His entire work produced before 1945 was destroyed during an air raid on Berlin in 1945. Schultze moved to Frankfurt two years later where he began making his first informel paintings in 1951. An exhibition of the artist group 'Quadriga' in 1952, of which he was a co-founder, in the 'zimmer galerie franck' in Frankfurt included works by the artist. The group's aim was to move away from figurative and formalistic abstraction towards the international avant-garde movements Action Painting and Tachisme. In 1955 Schultze married the painter Ursula Bluhm and he made his first relief paintings with different materials stuck onto the canvas. The so-called 'tabuskris' (tabulae scriptae), works combining painting and drawing made from 1957, were followed by the 'Migofs' in 1961. This name, invented by Schultze, refers to constructions and creatures, which, in his eyes, exist among the creatures of nature. He travelled regularly to Paris and New York during this period, before moving from Frankfurt to Cologne in 1968. He travelled to Russia, the USA and Asia. He was elected a member of the Akademie der Künste in Berlin in 1972. Schultze achieved an important late woke, on which he worked intensively until his death on 14 April 2005.

His work has been awarded a number of prizes: he was honoured with the title of a 'Titularprofessor' of the state of North-Rhine Westphalia in 1981; he was awarded the Großer Hessischer Kulturpreis in 1984, the Lovis Corinth Prize in 1986 and the Stefan-Lochner-Medal of the City of Cologne in 1990. Important exhibitions have been dedicated to the artist's work since the 1980s, for example the extensive retrospective exhibition in Düsseldorf, Berlin, Frankfurt and Saarbrücken in 1980/81 and the retrospective exhibition of his graphic work in the Albertina in Vienna and other museums in Germany in 1984. A large selection of his works toured to Cologne, Bologna and Budapest between 1994 and 1996. Schulze belonged to the last great names and precursors of German postwar-abstraction. [DB].




748
Bernard Schultze
Waghalsige Konstruktion, 1992.
Chalk drawing
Estimate:
€ 9,000 / $ 9,630
Sold:
€ 5,375 / $ 5,751

(incl. surcharge)