Sale: 550 / Evening Sale, June 07. 2024 in Munich Lot 124000126


124000126
Emil Schumacher
Matora, 1966.
Oil on panel
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000

 
$ 107,000 - 160,500

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Matora. 1966.
Oil on panel.
Lower right signed and dated. With the handwritten title on the reverse, as well as inscribed with a direction arrow and the dimensions. 53 x 136 cm (20.8 x 53.5 in).
[AR].
• Extremely sensual experience of form and color.
• Pronounced dialectic of monochrome color surface and graphic dynamics.
• His artistic quest to shape color as matter becomes literally tangible in the relief-like surface.
• The narrow horizontal format is a central component of his work; a comparable red variation is in the collection of the Sprengel Museum, Hanover (“Rubernos”, 1964).
• For the first time offered on the international auction market.
• From the important modern art collection of Dr. Hanns Hülsberg, Hagen
.

The work is listed in the archive of the Emil Schumacher Foundation, Hagen with the inventory number "0/3.707". We are grateful to Mr. Rouven Lotz, director of the Emil Schumacher Museum, Hagen, for his kind support in cataloging this lot.

PROVENANCE: Dr. Hanns Hülsberg Collection, Hagen.
Ever since family-owned.

EXHIBITION: Emil Schumacher. Arbeiten 1960 bis 1971, Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, November 5, 1971 - January 9, 1972, Düsseldorf, cat. no. 57.
Emil Schumacher. Arbeiten 1960-1971, Badischer Kunstverein, Karlsruhe, February 18 - March 26, 1972, cat. no. 57 ( with the label on the reverse).
Christian Rohlfs - Emil Schumacher. Entwicklungen. Haus am Waldsee, Berlin, May 26 - July 9, 1972.
Emil Schumacher. Arbeiten 1957 bis 1975, Karl-Ernst-Osthaus-Museum, Hagen, February 1 - March 16, 1975, cat. no. 33.

LITERATURE: Werner Schmalenbach, Emil Schumacher, Cologne 1981, p. 76, illu. no. 54 (here erroneously mentioned with the technique oil on canvas.).
Manfred de la Motte, Dokumente zum deutschen Informel, cat. Galerie Hennemann, Bonn 1976, p. 198 (illu.).
Ernst-Gerhard Güse, Das Erlebnis des Unbekannten, Ostfildern 2012, p.108 (illu. in color no 79 on p. 106).
Ulrich Schumacher/Rouven Lotz, Malerei ist gesteigertes Leben, Munich 2012.
"For the measure of the picture is the force that determines the line."
Emil Schumacher, Ein Buch mit sieben Siegeln, Materie, 1972.

“For Schumacher, blue was a ‘wonderful color’, he had a multi-faceted understanding of it, related to vastness, distance, infinity, sky and sea."

Ernst-Gerhard Güse, Das Erlebnis des Unbekannten, Ostfildern 2012, p. 108.

With "Matora", Emil Schumacher created an extremely sensual blend of form and color in 1966, reducing the compositional means to two key elements: A powerful blue glows from the depths of the pictorial space and is traversed in the foreground by relief-like lines in black and white. The pronounced dialectics of monochrome color surfaces and graphic elements, which is characteristic of works from this creative period, are clearly evident here. The artist deliberately juxtaposed his mostly red, yellow or blue pigments with hard, black lines. He wrote about the creation of the lines: "The shortest connection between two points is a straight line," says geometry. The shortest connection between two points within the picture can be a curved, intertwined, even an interrupted, but also a straight line. For the measure of the picture is the force that determines the line." (Emil Schumacher, Ein Buch mit sieben Siegeln, Materie, 1972)". In "Matora", the lines follow the elongated painting ground, emphasizing a landscape panorama format. In some cases, the artist digs them into the paint layer with enormous physicality or, as here, applies them in impasto materiality as a second, slightly elevated layer. The result is striking, very physical works that move between painting and relief are fully dedicated to the expressive power of materiality.
At the time "Matora" was created, Emil Schumacher was already one of the most established artists of the international art scene. Since 1950, his work had undergone a radical change. He abandoned the object as a pictorial motif and opted for abstract painting, with color becoming the main pictorial factor. This biographical-artistic process took place against the backdrop of a contemporary style influenced by the French École de Paris, Tachism and American Action Painting. For Schumacher, abstraction became the hallmark of his personal signature style. He gained increasing recognition as one of the most important representatives of European Informalism by the mid-1950s. His participation in the Venice Biennale in 1961 and the documenta shows in Kassel in 1958 and 1964 are evidence of his increasing success. He was awarded numerous prizes, including the Guggenheim Award in New York. At the end of the 1950s, he was appointed professor at the Hochschule für Bildende Künste in Hamburg. In 1966, the year "Matora" was created, he accepted a professorship in Karlsruhe and in 1967 went to the University of Minneapolis/USA for a year as a visiting professor. One year before his death on October 4, 1999 in San José on Ibiza, he was honored with one last major retrospective during his lifetime - a celebration of his extensive, multifaceted oeuvre in Paris, Hamburg and Munich. [AR]



124000126
Emil Schumacher
Matora, 1966.
Oil on panel
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000

 
$ 107,000 - 160,500

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.