Chagall, Matisse, Mir: Made in Paris: Museum Folkwang (ed.)
By (Author) Tobias Burg
Text by Peter Daners
Text by Ren Grohnert
Text by Hans-Jrgen Lechtreck
Designed by Tobias Burg
Designed by Matthias Langner / Steidl Design
Steidl Publishers
Steidl Verlag
28th February 2024
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Other graphic or visual art forms
Hardback
368
Width 220mm, Height 265mm
1700g
In Paris it seemed to me that there was everything to discover, above all the art of craftmanship. - Marc Chagall
Already by the end of the nineteenth century Paris had become a mecca for the graphic arts, with artists such as Henri de Toulouse- Lautrec, Jules Chret and Thophile-Alexandre Steinlen creating prints and posters there that were enthusiastically received by critics and collectors alike. Based on these developments was the twentieth-century production in the French capital of artists' books containing original prints, through which artists including Pierre Bonnard, Pablo Picasso, Max Ernst, Marc Chagall, Henri Matisse and Joan Mir reached audiences much wider than those they could access with their paintings. Masterpieces of the book medium came into being at the hands of printers like Fernand Mourlot and publishers Ambroise Vollard, Triade and Aim Maeght. Based on the extensive collection of Museum Folkwang in Essen, Chagall, Matisse, Mir. Made in Paris presents outstanding examples of artists' books and portfolios including Matisse's Jazz, Picasso's La Tauromaquia, Mir's A toute preuve and Chagall's etchings for the Hebrew Bible-all set in the context of the nineteenth century and the work of contemporary artists such as Jim Dine and David Lynch.
Museum Folkwang was founded in 1902 by Karl Ernst Osthaus in Hagen and soon developed into one of the most important museums for contemporary art. Following Osthaus' death, the collection was sold to Essen in 1922. For over 100 years Museum Folkwang has been one of Germany's leading museums. In 2019 it was voted Museum of the Year by the German section of the International Association of Art Critics (AICA).