Click HERE for more of Paul Klee and in the style of Paul Klee HERE where you can see my Y5’s artwork done in 2007.
You can find MORE art of Paul Klee on this link.
Paul Klee: Temple of Gardens
Paul Klee…Summer Landscape –1924
Paul Klee — The Mosque in Hammamet
Klee: Red Balloon – 1922
Paul Klee…On a motif from a Hamamet
Paul Klee and Chess
Mrs P in the South 1924
image:poster.net
Paul Klee…”The domes”
Paul Klee….Garden in St Germain 1914
Paul Klee (December 18, 1879 – June 29, 1940) was a Swiss painter of German nationality. He was influenced by many different art styles in his work, including expressionism, cubism, and surrealism. He was a student of orientalism. He and his friend, the Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, were also famous for teaching at the Bauhaus school of art and architecture.
Klee was born in Münchenbuchsee (near Bern), Switzerland, into a musical family—his father, Hans Klee, was a German music teacher at the Hofwil Teacher Seminar near Bern. Klee started young at both art and music. At age seven, he started playing the violin, and at age eight, he was given a box of chalk by his grandmother and was encouraged to draw frequently with it.[citation needed] Klee could have done either art or music as an adult; in his early years, he had wanted to be a musician, but he later decided on the visual arts during his teen years. He studied art at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich with Heinrich Knirr and Franz von Stuck. After traveling to Italy and then back to Bern, he settled in Munich, where he met Wassily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, and other avant-garde figures and became associated with Der Blaue Reiter. Here he met Bavarian pianist Lily Stumpf, whom he married; they had one son named Felix Paul.
In 1914, he visited Tunisia with August Macke and Louis Moilliet and was impressed by the quality of the light there, writing, “Colour has taken possession of me; no longer do I have to chase after it, I know that it has hold of me forever… Colour and I are one. I am a painter.” Klee also visited Italy (1901), and Egypt -1928- both of which greatly influenced his art. Klee was one of Die Blaue Vier (The Blue Four), with Kandinsky, Feininger, and Jawlensky; formed in 1923, they lectured and exhibited together in the USA in 1924. Klee influenced the work of other noted artists of the early 20th century including Belgian printmaker Rene Carcan.
Klee worked with many different types of media—oil paint, watercolor, ink, and more. He often combined them into one work. He has been variously associated with expressionism, cubism and surrealism, but his pictures are difficult to classify. They often have a fragile child-like quality to them and are usually on a small scale. They frequently allude to poetry, music and dreams and sometimes include words or musical notation. The later works are distinguished by spidery hieroglyph-like symbols which he famously described with, “A line is a dot going for a walk”. His better-known works include Southern (Tunisian) Gardens (1919), Ad Parnassum (1932), and Embrace (1939).
Following World War I, in which he painted camouflage on airplanes for the imperial German army, Klee taught at the Bauhaus, and from 1931 at the Düsseldorf Academy, before being denounced by the Nazi Party for producing “degenerate art” in 1933. The degenerate art exhibit catalogues had even called Klee’s work “the work of a sick mind.” Read more on this link…
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y does my lcd screen look larger than life?
hi shar 😯 … 😉 sorry, don’t know what you mean with your screen…
Paul Klee… His painting is exceeding!
I never seen bevore pictures like thouse one´s-Great colors, abstract ideas. Paul Klee is absolutly one of my favourite artists!
hi Fluge
Thanks for your comments. Klee is also one of my favourites! Glad you like his art!
Hi there
Great to see these pictures. I really enjoyed visiting the new Klee art gallery in Basel last summer. The pictures are fantastic and the building itself is well worth the visit.
hi Jeremy, I saw Klee’s work in the Art museum in London, but not many of his works were on display though.
Not entirely my cuppa tea, but I can see the man’s got talent!
hi Boer, not entirely mine too, but I do like some of them, especially the last one – Garden in St Germain and Summer Landscape