203
Adolf Richard Fleischmann
Komposition, 1951.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 25,000 / $ 27,500 Sold:
€ 65,880 / $ 72,468 (incl. surcharge)
Komposition. 1951/52.
Oil on canvas.
Not in Wedewer. Not in Fischer. Signed lower right. With inscription on verso. With inscription "Fleischmann" and "Haut" on stretcher as well as with several crossed out inscriptions. Frame with label, there with inscription "Fleischmann/1954". 130 x 88,5 cm (51,1 x 34,8 in).
His glimmering compositions dominated by shades of blue from the 1950s are the artist's most sought-after works on the international auction market (source: www.artnet.de).
We are grateful to Dr. Alfred M. Fischer, Bonn, for his expert advice.
PROVENANCE: Private collection France.
Having studied at the Royal Arts and Crafts School in Stuttgart from 1908 until 1911, Adolf Fleischmann went to the Royal Art Academy for another two years, where he visited, among others, the class of Adolf Hoelzel. Then he took up a job at the studio for graphic arts in Stuttgart. In 1917 he was employed as a scientific drawer at the canton hospital in Zurich. During this time Fleischmann still painted in an academic style, but increasingly tended towards abstraction in the 1920s. In 1928 the painter participated in the exhibitions 'without jury' in Stuttgart and Berlin. From this moment on the artist lived during the following five years alternately in Berlin, Hamburg, Ascona, Paris and the Ticino. Although he still produced a series of constructive-geometrical collages in 1936, Fleischmann left the strict geometry in 1937 and increasingly devoted himself to abstract painting that was more strongly marked by organic forms. When he was staying in Paris for two years since 1948, he joined the group 'L'Equipe'. He earned his living with cloth, poster and wallpaper designs. Between 1940 and 1945 Fleischmann lived in Southern France, but was nevertheless interned for several times. After a short return to a geometric style around 1943, Fleischmann found back to a sweeping linear painting style in 1946, when he joined the 'Réalités Nouvelles' and co-founded the group 'Espace'. A first individual exhibition took place in the Parisian gallery Creuze in 1948. In the beginning of Fleischmann's later work there were rhythmically grouped stripes twisted in narrow ankles.
In this painting from 1954 Adolf Richard achieves to create a very subtle color rhythm, by allowing just a few shades of yellow and red in the oval dominated by blue and violet, however, in the core of the composition he ascribes them to a central position. Fleischmann‘s art, adding a certain fragility to the color fields through a streak-like disintegration in front of a deep-black ground, at the same time a certain mysticism of the overall composition can be observed. Despite all construction: The meditative aspect prevails. It allows the composition to permeate conscience beyond all formal aspects.
In 1952 the artist left Europe and moved to New York, where he lived for more than 10 years. He worked as a scientific drawer at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the Columbia University between 1953 and 1952. In 1965 Fleischmann returned to Germany and spent the final years of his life as an artist in Stuttgart. In 1973 the first large retrospective of his work took place at a museum in Ulm. [KP].
Oil on canvas.
Not in Wedewer. Not in Fischer. Signed lower right. With inscription on verso. With inscription "Fleischmann" and "Haut" on stretcher as well as with several crossed out inscriptions. Frame with label, there with inscription "Fleischmann/1954". 130 x 88,5 cm (51,1 x 34,8 in).
His glimmering compositions dominated by shades of blue from the 1950s are the artist's most sought-after works on the international auction market (source: www.artnet.de).
We are grateful to Dr. Alfred M. Fischer, Bonn, for his expert advice.
PROVENANCE: Private collection France.
Having studied at the Royal Arts and Crafts School in Stuttgart from 1908 until 1911, Adolf Fleischmann went to the Royal Art Academy for another two years, where he visited, among others, the class of Adolf Hoelzel. Then he took up a job at the studio for graphic arts in Stuttgart. In 1917 he was employed as a scientific drawer at the canton hospital in Zurich. During this time Fleischmann still painted in an academic style, but increasingly tended towards abstraction in the 1920s. In 1928 the painter participated in the exhibitions 'without jury' in Stuttgart and Berlin. From this moment on the artist lived during the following five years alternately in Berlin, Hamburg, Ascona, Paris and the Ticino. Although he still produced a series of constructive-geometrical collages in 1936, Fleischmann left the strict geometry in 1937 and increasingly devoted himself to abstract painting that was more strongly marked by organic forms. When he was staying in Paris for two years since 1948, he joined the group 'L'Equipe'. He earned his living with cloth, poster and wallpaper designs. Between 1940 and 1945 Fleischmann lived in Southern France, but was nevertheless interned for several times. After a short return to a geometric style around 1943, Fleischmann found back to a sweeping linear painting style in 1946, when he joined the 'Réalités Nouvelles' and co-founded the group 'Espace'. A first individual exhibition took place in the Parisian gallery Creuze in 1948. In the beginning of Fleischmann's later work there were rhythmically grouped stripes twisted in narrow ankles.
In this painting from 1954 Adolf Richard achieves to create a very subtle color rhythm, by allowing just a few shades of yellow and red in the oval dominated by blue and violet, however, in the core of the composition he ascribes them to a central position. Fleischmann‘s art, adding a certain fragility to the color fields through a streak-like disintegration in front of a deep-black ground, at the same time a certain mysticism of the overall composition can be observed. Despite all construction: The meditative aspect prevails. It allows the composition to permeate conscience beyond all formal aspects.
In 1952 the artist left Europe and moved to New York, where he lived for more than 10 years. He worked as a scientific drawer at the College of Physicians and Surgeons of the Columbia University between 1953 and 1952. In 1965 Fleischmann returned to Germany and spent the final years of his life as an artist in Stuttgart. In 1973 the first large retrospective of his work took place at a museum in Ulm. [KP].
203
Adolf Richard Fleischmann
Komposition, 1951.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 25,000 / $ 27,500 Sold:
€ 65,880 / $ 72,468 (incl. surcharge)