Marking the 100th anniversary of the founding of the influential German
school of art and design, Sotheby’s Impressionist and Modern Art Evening and
Day Sales will present artworks by th ose who taught at the Bauhaus and those
whose outputs were transformed by its teachings. Founded in 1919 by the
architect Walter Gropius , the Bauhaus – which resided in Weimar, Dessau and Berlin
until it was closed down under pressure from the Nazis in 1933 – aimed to unite
the disciplines of crafts, art and architecture. This core objective was
conceived as a reimagining of the material world that would reflect unity in
all the arts as a response to the rapid modernisation of life.
The auctions on
26 and 27 February will comprise works by key proponents of the emblematic movement,
including Wassily Kandinsky, Paul Klee, Oskar Schlemmer, László Moholy -Nagy and
Lyonel Feininger .
WASSILY KANDINSKY
Wassily Kandinsky, Vertiefte Regung (Deepened Impulse) , oil on canvas, 1928 (est. £ 5,500,000 - 7,500,000
)
“Every work of art comes into being in the same way as the cosmos – by means
of catastrophes, which ultimately create out of the cacophony of the various instruments
that symphony we call the music of spheres. The creation of the work of art is
the creation of the world .” Painted in February 1928 while Kandinsky was
teaching at the Bauhaus in Dessau, this meditation on the essential beauty of
circles embodies the aesthetic principles that he promoted to his students.
Circles
dominated Kandinsky’s most meaningful compositions of this intellectually sophisticated period of his career,
and he expounded upon their incomparable aesthetic values in his writing s. In
this composition, the circles appear to be floating in space, like stars eclipsing
and colliding with one another in their perpetual motion t hrough the cosmos . When
the school moved to Dessau, having been closed by the National Socialists in
Weimar, Gropius designed a housing estate for the Bauhaus masters.
Once Kandinsky
completed this work, he hung it in the exotically coloured living room in the
Masters ’ House that he shared with Klee – set against walls painted gold, pale
pink and ivory. The painting’s first owner was businessman and collector Otto Ralfs,
who went bankrupt in 1930s and sold it to Salomon Hale, a private collector of
Polish origin, based in Mexico City. This was organised with the assistance of
Mexican muralist Diego Rivera, who had wanted to purchase it for himself but
was sadly unable to afford it.
Wassily Kandinsky, Sans titre , watercolour and ink on paper, 1941 (est. £450,000 - 550,000)
Painted in Paris in 1941 , this wonderfully playful and optimistic work on
paper belongs to the last great period of abstraction in Kandinsky’s art. Drawing
on the severe geometric construction which characterised the works of his final
Bauhaus years, in Paris he superimpose d a repertoire of stylised and
biomorphic shapes that seem to have been borrowed from the realm of molecular
biology (first explorations into which were occurring at the same moment) .
Here, a variety of forms – both geometric and organic – are scattered across
the surface of the paper, set against a neutral monochrome background .
OSKAR
SCHLEMMER
Schlemmer tirelessly strove to achieve a synthesis of the arts, and
of all those who taught at the Bauhaus, his works most completely embody its
aesthetic and ideals. In 1920 the artist was invited by Walter Gropius to join
the Bauhaus school , working as the ‘master’ of mural, wood and metal workshops
– combining dance, stage and costume design as well as architecture with the
three -dimensional medium of painting . His art focuses on positioning figures within
a pictorial space, which he formed by opposing horizontal, vertical and
diagonal planes.
Oskar Schlemmer, Tischgesellschaft (Group at Table) , oil and lacquer on canvas, 1923 (est.
£1,000,000 - 1,500,000)
“The figure is static, the space is movement .” Painted
a year after the creation of his ballet, Tischgesellschaft was Schlemmer’s first
painting to show a group of people in perspectival space . This space is defined
simply by a vertical line at the top, which deno tes the corner of a room that
is dominated by a dramatically foreshortened table . The exaggerated dive of
the table into the background causes an almost Surreal effect, and Moholy -Nagy
illustrated this work in his discussion of the importance of dream and the language
of the subconscious in the art of the Surrealists . The figures are rendered in
solid, gently curved shapes , evok ing a sense of classical harmony and give the
composition a meditative quality . The human shape is contained in regular,
linear, geometric patterns, and purified of all individual features ,
reminiscent of the te achings of Plato, the Egyptians and Greeks, Leonardo da
Vinci and Albrecht Dürer.
Oskar Schlemmer, Am gel änder, fünf - figuren - gruppe (By the Handrail,
Group of Five Figures) ,
pencil and coloured crayon on paper affixed to the artist’s mount, circa 1931 (est. £40,000 - 60,000)
Offering an insight into
the artist’s working process, and the idea of sublime perfection in his art, this
refined drawing depicts five women, each holding onto the handrail of a staircase
, superimposed upon each other. Schlemme r achieves a perfect harmony despite
the opposing planes of movement, imbuing the figures with a meditative, calming
poise as they climb ever higher. The theme of the staircase proved particularly
compelling for the artist and this series culminated in the monumental Bauhaustreppe
of 1932, today on view at the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
LÁSZLÓ MOHOLY -
NAGY
László Moholy - Nagy , Segments
, tempera and traces
of pencil on canvas, 1921 (est. £300,000 - 500,000) “
Art is the most complex,
vitalising and civilising of human actions. Thus it is of biological
necessity.” Maholy -Nagy firmly believed that the art of the present must parallel
contemporary reality – and the new technological advancements – in order to
communicate meaning to its publi c. Thus he c onsidered traditional, figurative
painting obsolete and turned to pure geometric abstraction – attempting to
define an objective science of essential forms, colours, and materials, which
would promote a more unified social environment . This work demonstrates Maholy
-Nagy ’s characteristic innovative boldness , establishing a dialogue between
the elongated black bar and the semi -circular shapes, as well as between these
finely painted elements and the coarse appearance of the bare canvas . The
piece also explores a way of representing light and shadow through the purely
abstract vocabulary.
LYONEL FEININGER
Feininger illustrated the front cover of
the Bauhaus’ founding proclamation, depicting the united vision of the
artistic movement with a radiant image of a gothic cathedral
Lyonel
Feininger, Brücke
II (Bridge II) , oil
on canvas , 191 4 - 15 (est. £4,000,000 - 6,000,000)
One of Feininger’s most
accomplished and striking oils painted in the cubist manner , Brücke II , prefigures
the artist’s involvement with the Bauhaus by a few years. It was inspired by a small
Gothic bridge over the Ilm River near Weimar – a region that provided some of
the most iconic motifs in his work . Employing a geometric faceting of forms, the
broken -down diagonals of the bridge and its surroundings are at once complex
and legible.
Demonstrating a strong influence of French Cubism, particularly
the landscapes of Georges Braque, Feininger depicts the scene on a monumental scale
and renders the modest stone bridge with a sense of majestic splendour. Between
1912 and 1919, the bridge featured in seven oils and several works on paper,
tracing the trajectory from his earliest Cubist- inspired style pieces to the
more abstract, broken -down forms of his later painting . The series was a
turning point, as the move to greater freedom of form revolutionised his entire
oeuvre and provided a stepping stone towards the pure forms abstraction developed
at the Bauhaus .
Lyonel Feininger, Wüste see (Desert Sea) , oil on canvas, 1945 (est. £140,000 - 1 80,000)
“Reminiscence, for which I, like all of us, possess an unusual talent, is the
most common source for the best in my work .” Feininger did not create art for
purely aesthetic reasons, but rather because of an urge to bring his innermost
memories to life , and capturing a fleeting memory was at the core of his
creative process. Feininger moved to New York in 1937 after almost fifty years
in Germany, and expressed his longing for the Baltic Sea with a series of
watercolours and paintings depicting his beloved seaside .
Completed on 9 February,
just two months before the end of World War II, Desert Sea is a reflection of both
blissful and melanchol ic memories of summers spent swimming, sailing and
fishing . Though Feininger managed to leave Germany, he worried about his
friends who remained behind, and mourned the destruction of his adopted
country. The deep dark colours and almost violent black slashes of the work are
in stark contrast to earlier brighter and more tranquil depictions of the
motif, as two lonely figures cling to each other against the immense red sky with
a tiny ship only just visible on the horizon . The rich reds and ochres, rather
than the tranquil blues of his other seascapes, reference the striking rock formations
of the California desert and are emblematic of the graphic style of
Feininger’s later period.
PAUL KLEE
Paul Klee, Junger Blaumond (Young Blue - Moon) , gouache and watercolour on paper mounted on
paper, 1918 (est. £70,000 - 100,000)
A delicate and luminous watercolour representing
a seascape by night , created by Klee at a time when colour returned to the forefront
of the artist’s oeuvre for the first time since his celebrated series of
Tunisian landscapes in 1914. Inspired by a Chagall exhibition in Berlin i n 1917,
Klee introduces a palette of tender and transparent washes of colour
complementing the fine lines of his drawing. The motif of the moon was of great
importance to the artist, and the vibrant blue colour ing here can be
associated with the Blaue Reiter group’s search for the ‘spiritual in art’ . In
1920 Walter Gropius invited Klee to join the staff of the Bauhaus at Dessau,
where he taught various aspects of design, from book -binding to metalwork.