Has Head, Hand, Feet and Heart
Has Head, Hand, Feet and Heart is a watercolor by Paul Klee painted in 1930.[1] It is held at the Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, in Düsseldorf, which acquired this painting in 1960 with the collection of the Pittsburgh entrepreneur G. David Thompson.[2][3]
History
The origin of the title of the picture is unclear. On one hand, the Bauhaus Dessau organised a "bart-herzen-nase-fest" (beard heart-nose festival) in 1928, at which Klee's student Herbert Bayer was also present. On the other hand, Klee chose the title Nase, Mund, Brüste; Büste, Lippen, Brüste (nose, mouth, breasts; bust, lips, breasts) for another work as early as 1927. Klee's friend Hans Arp also created a painting called Kopf, Augen, Nase, Schnurrbart (Head, eyes, nose, moustache).
Description
A small red heart is centrally located in a broad pale red cross that extends almost across the entire image. In the upper left-hand corner, in the manner of a child's drawing, a stylized head with a white headband, plate-round blue eyes without pupils, the nose marked by a thin line, below it a tiny mouth, indicated by two parallel lines. Clockwise, in the next corners, on each elongated grey-blue colour spot, there follows a stick with one hand, a stick with hand and foot and another stick with a foot, which, like the other parts of the body, is executed in a pale red colour. The ground of the picture is in a broken white with slight grey or blue-grey shadows on the ground and in the upper left corner of the picture.
Interpretation
The watercolour is seen as a disguised depiction of Christ with a parodistic undertone. With regard to the blasphemy trial against George Grosz, Klee wanted to avoid a possible blasphemy accusation. The picture shows an atheistic position, clearly documented from text and picture testimonies of the artist from his entire creative period.[2]
Reception
In 1999, Marianne Schroeder was influenced by the watercolour for her composition Wie der Klee vierblättrig wurde (How the clover became four-leaved). The work was premiered by the Ensemble Sortisatio and recorded on the CD 8 Pieces on Paul Klee.
See also
Notes
- ^ Partsch 2003, p. 68.
- ^ a b Donat de Chapeaurouge: Paul Klee und der christliche Himmel, Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart 1990, p. 10 ff.
- ^ Provenance
References
- Partsch, Susanna (2003). Paul Klee 1879–1940. Cologne: Taschen. ISBN 978-3-8228-5981-0 – via Internet archive.
- v
- t
- e
- Ab ovo (1917)
- Swamp Legend (1919)
- Villa R (1919)
- Angelus Novus (1920)
- Camel (in Rhythmic Landscape with Trees) (1920)
- Senecio (1922)
- Twittering Machine (1922)
- Architecture (1923)
- Fish Magic (1925)
- Limits of Reason (1927)
- Cat and Bird (1928)
- Highway and Byways (1929)
- Has Head, Hand, Feet and Heart (1930)
- Ad Parnassum (1932)
- In the Magic Mirror (1934)
- Heroic Roses (1938)
- Insula dulcamara (1938)
- Angel, Still Groping (1939)
- Death and Fire (1940)
- Lily Klee (wife)
- Fate of the Animals (restoration work)
- Die Tunisreise (2007 documentary)