Art Basel

Art Basel

Messe Basel, Messeplatz 10 Basel, 4058, Switzerland Friday, September 24, 2021–Sunday, September 26, 2021 Booth H12, 2.0

“The human form will always be the grand parable of the artist.”
- Oskar Schlemmer 

le peintre à la tour eiffel by marc chagall

Marc Chagall

Le peintre à la Tour Eiffel, 1965

750,000–1,000,000 EUR

Messe Basel, Messeplatz 10
Basel, 4058, Switzerland

At Art Basel 2021, Galerie Thomas will focus on the representation of  the human figure in modern art. Paintings, sculptures and works on  paper span the spectrum from classical modernism and especially  expressionism to the post-war avant-garde. Starting with important  artists of classical modernism such as Max Beckmann, Chaim Soutine,  Edvard Munch and Emil Nolde, the overview at Galerie Thomas’ booth will  also include works by Pablo Picasso, Fernand Léger and Ferdinand Hodler and extend to more recent positions by Andy Warhol or A. R. Penck. Thus, the depictions of the human figure shown at this  year's booth of Galerie Thomas at Art Basel report on the intellectual  historical development of modern painting, from the primacy of nature to  the search for the ideal and concentration on the symbol. The following works will also be on display in the presentation: Alexej von Jawlensky's “Portrait of a Girl” belongs to a group of  masterpieces that were all created in the period of 1910 and fully  represent Jawlensky's individual, unique style, which was to reach its  peak in the years leading up to 1912. Here, Jawlensky experiments with  the concept abstracting the individual to an extent that it becomes  universally valid and an archetypal character. The portrait of a blonde woman by Kees van Dongen, painted in 1912,  is still completely committed to the psychologizing art of portraiture.  Its painting style combines realistic and impressionistic elements. Van  Dongen became famous overnight when he exhibited with what later became  known as the “Fauves”. He was considered the wildest of the painters in  this group of French Expressionists, which also included Matisse, Derain  and Vlaminck. But the “wild one” van Dongen, the disturbing outsider,  became one of the most sought-after portrait artists of the late Belle  Epoque and the golden twenties. The painting “Figure on a Grey Background” by Oskar Schlemmer makes  the leap into the period between the world wars and exemplifies the  significant development in the conception of figurative representation  of the avant-garde of the 1920s. The theme that runs like a red thread  through Schlemmer's oeuvre is the human figur in space. For Schlemmer,  the human figure in a pictorial work is an abstraction; his figures are  not concrete portraits, but a transfer of the individual into a  pictorial structure of elementary formal language. The subject of the family in a constellation of three in Emil Nolde's  painting from 1949 immediately evokes associations with the cycle of  themes of religious images, a focus in Nolde's work - in particular with  the Holy Family with Mary, Joseph and the little Christ Child, the  archetype of the ideal family. Nolde repeatedly worked on Biblical  topics throughout his oeuvre, as his life was influenced religiously  from earliest childhood. However, it is an undogmatic, immediate and  very personal religiosity that is inherent in Nolde's figure paintings  which are characterized by glowing colours. In his work “Le peintre à la Tour Eiffel”, Marc Chagall combines his  typical imagery between dreamy, almost naive sensitivity and  surrealistic complexity with reminiscences of his adopted home Paris and  nostalgic memories of his Russian hometown. The painter's head,  undoubtedly an ideal self-portrait by Chagall, is at the same time a  universal symbol for mankind.