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12 December 2024
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Alexej von Jawlensky
Large Meditation: before Night comes
, 1936
25 x 18 cm. (9.8 x 7.1 in.)
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Alexej von Jawlensky
Russian, 1864–1941
Large Meditation: before Night comes
,
1936
Alexej von Jawlensky
Large Meditation: before Night comes
, 1936
25 x 18 cm. (9.8 x 7.1 in.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Paintings, oil on linen-finish paper on cardboard
Size
25 x 18 cm. (9.8 x 7.1 in.)
Markings
signed with monogram lower left, dated lower right
on the reverse cover inscribed by Clemens Weiler: 'A. Jawlensky, Gr. Konstr. Kopf, Wiesbaden, Bevor es Nacht wird 5/1936 Nr. 52'
Price
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Galerie Thomas
Munich
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About this Artwork
Catalogue
All artworks inventory
Movement
Modern Art
Catalogue Raisonné
Jawlensky 2336
Exhibitions
Städtische Galerie, Bietigheim-Bissingen 1994. Alexej von Jawlensky, Gemälde. Aquarelle. Zeichnungen. No. 70
Literature
Alexej von Jawlensky, Gemälde. Aquarelle. Zeichnungen, Städtische Galerie Bietigheim-Bissingen, 2 July - 11 September 1994, p.119 ill., p. 192
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Description
Created between 1934 and 1937, the "Meditations" form the last important body of work by Alexej von Jawlensky. The artist himself regarded them as his crowning achievement and indeed, they are outstanding not only in their formal concentration as the quintessence of his life-long efforts as a painter, but also with regard to the circumstances under which they were created and their recourse to painterly traditions. Here again, the artist limited himself to a strictly defined repertoire of forms, which he varied in ever new colour compositions and accentuated by the lines of the internal drawing and the different areas of colour. Compared with the "Abstract Heads", here the contours of the face were reduced even further - there are no markings for the chin area, hair strands or the like. Only the most minimal signs denoting a face remained - a double cross for the nose, the eye area and the mouth. He thereby succeeded to imbue these works with maximum expressive power, diversity of representation and difference in character. The search for a true or even just adequate representation for the metaphysical spirit informing his notion of a transcendental spiritualism, which he himself simply termed "religious", reached its culmination in these images.
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