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Kurt Schwitters



 
 
Kurt Hermann Eduard Karl Julius Schwitters (20 June 1887 - 8 January 1948) was a German painter who was born in Hanover
Hanover

Hanover or Hannover#Definitions , on the river Leine, is the capital city of the Federal states of Germany of Lower Saxony , Germany and was once by personal union the family seat of the House of Hanover, in their dignities as the dukes of Brunswick-L?neburg ....
, Germany. Schwitters worked in several genres and media, including Dada
Dada

Dada or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in Z?rich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1922. The movement primarily involved visual arts, literature?poetry, art manifestoes, aesthetics?theatre, and graphic design, and concentrated its anti-war politics through a rejection of the prevailing standards in art...
, Constructivism
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
, Surrealism
Surrealism

Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early-1920s, and is best known for the visual artworks and writings of the group members....
, poetry
Poetry

Poetry is a form of literature art in which language is used for its aesthetics and evocative qualities in addition to, or in lieu of, its apparent meaning ....
, sound, painting
Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a surface . In art, the term describes both the act and the result, which is called a painting....
, sculpture
Sculpture

Sculpture is Three-dimensional space artwork created by shaping or combining hard and or plastic material, sound, and or text and or light, commonly Stone sculpture , metal, glass, or wood....
, graphic design
Graphic design

The term graphic design can refer to a number of artistic and professional disciplines which focus on visual communication and presentation. Various methods are used to create and combine symbols, images and/or words to create a visual representation of ideas and messages....
, typography
Typography

Typography is the art and techniques of typesetting, type design, and modifying type glyphs. Type glyphs are created and modified using a variety of illustration techniques....
 and what came to be known as installation art
Installation art

Installation art is the use of sculptural materials and other interesting material to transform a space or, argueably, an area. Installation art is not necessarily confined to gallery spaces and can be any material intervention in everyday public or private spaces....
. He is most famous for his collage
Collage

Sorry, no overview for this topic
s, called Merz Pictures.

Hannover Kurt Schwitters was born on 20 June 1887, at No.2 Rumannstraße, Hannover, the only child of Edward Schwitters and his wife Henriette (née Beckemeyer).






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Quotations


My ultimate objective is to combine art and non-art in a Merzgesamtweldbild a complete universal picture.






Encyclopedia


Kurt Hermann Eduard Karl Julius Schwitters (20 June 1887 - 8 January 1948) was a German painter who was born in Hanover
Hanover

Hanover or Hannover#Definitions , on the river Leine, is the capital city of the Federal states of Germany of Lower Saxony , Germany and was once by personal union the family seat of the House of Hanover, in their dignities as the dukes of Brunswick-L?neburg ....
, Germany. Schwitters worked in several genres and media, including Dada
Dada

Dada or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in Z?rich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1922. The movement primarily involved visual arts, literature?poetry, art manifestoes, aesthetics?theatre, and graphic design, and concentrated its anti-war politics through a rejection of the prevailing standards in art...
, Constructivism
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
, Surrealism
Surrealism

Surrealism is a cultural movement that began in the early-1920s, and is best known for the visual artworks and writings of the group members....
, poetry
Poetry

Poetry is a form of literature art in which language is used for its aesthetics and evocative qualities in addition to, or in lieu of, its apparent meaning ....
, sound, painting
Painting

Painting is the practice of applying paint, pigment, color or other medium to a surface . In art, the term describes both the act and the result, which is called a painting....
, sculpture
Sculpture

Sculpture is Three-dimensional space artwork created by shaping or combining hard and or plastic material, sound, and or text and or light, commonly Stone sculpture , metal, glass, or wood....
, graphic design
Graphic design

The term graphic design can refer to a number of artistic and professional disciplines which focus on visual communication and presentation. Various methods are used to create and combine symbols, images and/or words to create a visual representation of ideas and messages....
, typography
Typography

Typography is the art and techniques of typesetting, type design, and modifying type glyphs. Type glyphs are created and modified using a variety of illustration techniques....
 and what came to be known as installation art
Installation art

Installation art is the use of sculptural materials and other interesting material to transform a space or, argueably, an area. Installation art is not necessarily confined to gallery spaces and can be any material intervention in everyday public or private spaces....
. He is most famous for his collage
Collage

Sorry, no overview for this topic
s, called Merz Pictures.

Early influences and the beginnings of Merz


Hannover

Kurt Schwitters was born on 20 June 1887, at No.2 Rumannstraße, Hannover, the only child of Edward Schwitters and his wife Henriette (née Beckemeyer). His parents were propietors of a ladies' clothes shop. They sold the business in 1898, using the money to buy five properties in Hannover which they rented out, allowing the family to live off the income for the rest of Schwitter's life in Germany. In 1901 the family moved to Waldstraße (later Waldhausenstraße) 5, future site of the Merzbau. The same year, Schwitters suffered his first epileptic seizure
Epilepsy

Epilepsy is a common chronic neurological disorder characterized by recurrent unprovoked seizure s. These seizures are transient signs and/or symptoms of abnormal, excessive or synchronous neuronal activity in the brain....
, a condition that would exempt him from military service in World War I until the last stages of the conflict, when conscription began to be applied to a far wider section of the population.

After studying art at the Dresden
Dresden

Dresden is the capital city of the Germany Federal Free state of Saxony. It is situated in a valley on the River Elbe. The Dresden conurbation is part of the Saxon triangle metropolitan area....
 Academy alongside Otto Dix
Otto Dix

Wilhelm Heinrich Otto Dix // was a Germany painter and printmaker. Noted for his ruthless and harshly realistic depictions of Weimar Republic society and of the brutality of war, he, along with George Grosz, is widely considered one of the most important artists of the New Objectivity....
 and George Grosz
George Grosz

George Grosz was a Germany artist known especially for his savagely caricature drawings of Berlin life in the 1920s. He was a prominent member of the Berlin Dada and New Objectivity group during the Weimar Republic before he emigrated to the United States in 1932....
, (although Schwitters seems to have been unaware of their work, or indeed of contemporary Dresden artists Die Brücke
Die Brücke

Die Br?cke was a group of German expressionist artists formed in Dresden in 1905, after which the Br?cke Museum in Berlin was named. Founding members were Fritz Bleyl, Erich Heckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff....
), 1909-14, Schwitters returned to Hannover and started his artistic career as a post-impressionist. As the First World War progressed, however, his work became darker, gradually developing a distinctive expressionist tone. Expressionism was a predominantly German artistic movement best exemplified by Die Brücke
Die Brücke

Die Br?cke was a group of German expressionist artists formed in Dresden in 1905, after which the Br?cke Museum in Berlin was named. Founding members were Fritz Bleyl, Erich Heckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff....
, and by the paintings of Emil Nolde
Emil Nolde

Emil Nolde was a Germany Painting and printmaker. He was one of the first expressionism, a member of Die Br?cke, and is considered to be one of the great oil painting and watercolor painters of the 20th century....
 and Ernst Kirchner in particular. In 1918, his art was to change dramatically as a direct consequence of Germany's economic, political and military collapse at the end of the First World War.
"In the war, things were in terrible turmoil. What I had learned at the academy was of no use to me and the useful new ideas were still unready.... Everything had broken down and new things had to be made out of the fragments; and this is Merz. It was like a revolution within me, not as it was, but as it should have been."


Der Sturm

Schwitters was to come into contact with Herwarth Walden
Herwarth Walden

Herwarth Walden was a German Expressionist artist and art expert in many disciplines. He is broadly acknowledged as one of the most important discoverers and promoters of German avant-garde art in the early twentieth century ....
 after exhibiting expressionist paintings at the Hanover Secession in February 1918. He showed two Abstraktionen (semi-abstract expressionist landscapes) at Walden's gallery Der Sturm
Der Sturm

Der Sturm was a magazine of expressionism founded in Berlin in 1910 by Herwarth Walden. Originally running weekly, and then monthly in 1914, it became a quarterly in 1924 until it ceased publication in 1932....
, Berlin, June 1918, which led directly to meetings with members of the Berlin Avant-garde
Avant-garde

Avant-garde means "advance guard" or "vanguard". The adjective form is used in English, to refer to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly with respect to art, culture, and politics....
, including Raoul Hausmann
Raoul Hausmann

Raoul Hausmann was an Austrian artist and writer. One of the key figures in Dada#Berlin, his experimental photographic collages, sound poetry and institutional critiques would have a profound influence on the European Avant-Garde in the aftermath of World War I....
, Hannah Höch
Hannah Höch

Hannah H?ch was a Germany Dada artist. She is best known for her work of the Weimar Germany period, when she was one of the originators of photomontage....
 and Hans Arp in the autumn of 1918.. Whilst Schwitters still created work in an expressionist style into 1919 (and would continue to paint realist pictures up to his death in 1948), the first abstract collages, influenced in particular by recent works by Hans Arp, would appear in late 1918, which Schwitters dubbed Merz after a fragment of found text from the sentence Commerz Und Privatbank in his picture Das Merzbild, Winter 1918-19. By the end of 1919 he'd become famous, after his first one-man exhibition at Der Sturm gallery, June 1919, and the publication that August of the poem An Anna Blume
An Anna Blume

An Anna Blume is a poem written by the German artist Kurt Schwitters in 1919. It has been described as a parody of a love poem, an emblem of the chaos and madness of the era, and as a harbinger of a new poetic language....
 (usually translated as 'To Anna Flower', or 'To Eve Blossom'), a dadaist non-sensical love poem.

Schwitters spent most of the war working as a technical draftsman in a factory just outside Hannover. He was drafted into the 73rd Hannoverian Regiment in March 1917, but exempted as unfit in June of the same year. By his own account, his time as a draftsman influenced his later work, using Machines as metaphors of human activity.
"In the war [at the machine factory at Wülfen] I discovered my love for the wheel and recognized that machines are abstractions of the human spirit."


He married his cousin Helma Fischer on 5 October 1915. Their first son, Gerd, died within a week of birth, 9 September 1916; their second, Ernst, was born on 16 November 1918, and was to remain close to his father for the rest of his life, up to and including a shared exile in London together.

Dada and Merz

Schwitters asked to join Berlin Dada either in late 1918 or early 1919; According to Raoul Hausmann, Richard Huelsenbeck
Richard Huelsenbeck

Richard Huelsenbeck was a poet, writer and drummer born in Frankenau, Hesse-Nassau.Huelsenbeck was a medical student on the eve of World War I....
 rejected the application because of Schwitters' links to Der Sturm and to Expressionism in general, which was seen by the Dadaists as hopelessly romantic and obsessed with Aesthetics
Aesthetics

Aesthetics or esthetics is commonly known as the study of senses or sensori-emotional values, sometimes called judgments of sentiment and taste ....
. Ridiculed by Huelsenbeck as ‘the Caspar David Friedrich of the Dadaist Revolution’, he would reply with an absurdist short story Franz Mullers Drahtfrühling, Ersters Kapitel: Ursachen und Beginn der grossen glorreichen Revolution in Revon published in Der Sturm (xiii/11, 1922), which featured an innocent bystander who started a revolution 'merely by being there'.

Though not a direct participant in Berlin Dada
Dada

Dada or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in Z?rich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1922. The movement primarily involved visual arts, literature?poetry, art manifestoes, aesthetics?theatre, and graphic design, and concentrated its anti-war politics through a rejection of the prevailing standards in art...
's activities, he employed Dadaist ideas in his work, used the word itself on the cover of Anna Blume, and would later give Dada recitals throughout Europe on the subject with Theo Van Doesburg
Theo van Doesburg

Theo van Doesburg was a Netherlands artist, practicing in painting, writing, poetry and architecture. He is best known as the founder and leader of De Stijl....
, Tristan Tzara
Tristan Tzara

Tristan Tzara was a Romanian and France avant-garde poet, essayist and performance artist. Also active as a journalist, playwright, literary and art critic, composer and film director, he was known best for being one of the founders and central figures of the anti-establishment Dada movement....
, Hans Arp and Raoul Hausmann. In many ways his work was more in tune with Zürich Dada's
Dada

Dada or Dadaism is a cultural movement that began in Z?rich, Switzerland, during World War I and peaked from 1916 to 1922. The movement primarily involved visual arts, literature?poetry, art manifestoes, aesthetics?theatre, and graphic design, and concentrated its anti-war politics through a rejection of the prevailing standards in art...
 championing of performance
Performance art

Performance art is art in which the actions of an individual or a group at a particular place and in a particular time constitute the work. It can happen anywhere, at any time, or for any length of time....
 and abstract art
Abstract art

Abstract art uses a visual language of form, color and line to create a composition which may exist with a degree of independence from visual references in the world....
 than Berlin Dada's agit-prop approach, and indeed examples of his work were published in the last Zürich dada publication, der Zeltweg, November 1919, alongside the work of Arp and Sophie Tauber. Whilst his work was far less political than key figures in Berlin Dada, such as George Grosz
George Grosz

George Grosz was a Germany artist known especially for his savagely caricature drawings of Berlin life in the 1920s. He was a prominent member of the Berlin Dada and New Objectivity group during the Weimar Republic before he emigrated to the United States in 1932....
 and John Heartfield
John Heartfield

John Heartfield is the Anglicisation name of the German photomontage artist Helmut Herzfeld. He chose to call himself Heartfield in 1916, to criticize the rabid nationalism and anti-British sentiment prevalent in Germany during World War I....
, he would remain close friends with various members, including Hannah Hoch and Raoul Hausmann for the rest of his career.

Merz has been called 'Psychological Collage'. Most of the works attempt to make coherent aesthetic sense of the world around Schwitters, using fragments of found objects. These fragments often make witty allusions to current events. (Merzpicture 29a, Picture with Turning Wheel, 1920 for instance, combines a series of wheels that only turn clockwise, alluding to the general drift Rightwards across Germany after the Spartacist Uprising
Spartacist uprising

The Spartacist uprising, also known as the January uprising, was a general strike in Germany from January 5 to January 12, 1919. Its suppression is considered to mark the end of the German Revolution....
 in January that year, whilst Mai 191(9), alludes to the strikes organized by the Bavarian Workers' and Soldiers' Council.) Autobiographical elements also abound; test prints of graphic designs; bus tickets; ephemera given by friends. Later collages would feature proto-pop mass media images. (En Morn, 1947, for instance, has a print of a blonde young girl included, prefiguring the early work of Eduardo Paolozzi
Eduardo Paolozzi

Eduardo Luigi Paolozzi, Order of the British Empire, Royal Academy , was a Scotland sculpture and artist. He was a major figure in the international art world working without compromise on his own interpretation and vision of the world around us....
, whilst many works seem to have directly influenced Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Rauschenberg

Robert Rauschenberg was an American artist who came to prominence in the 1950s transition from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art. Rauschenberg is perhaps most famous for his "Combines" of the 1950s, in which non-traditional materials and objects were employed in innovative combinations....
, who said after seeing an exhibition of Schwitters' work at the Sidney Janis Gallery, 1959, that "I felt like he made it all just for me.")

He was to use the term Merz for the rest of his career. Whilst these works were usually collages incorporating found objects, such as bus tickets, old wire and fragments of newsprint, Merz also included artist's periodicals, sculptures, sound poems
Sound poetry

Sound poetry is a form of literary or musical composition in which the phonetic aspects of human speech are foregrounded at the expense of more conventional semantic and syntax values; "verse without words"....
 and what would later be called "installations
Installation art

Installation art is the use of sculptural materials and other interesting material to transform a space or, argueably, an area. Installation art is not necessarily confined to gallery spaces and can be any material intervention in everyday public or private spaces....
".

Internationalism 1922-37


Merz (Periodical)


As the political climate in Germany became more liberal and stable, Schwitters' work became less influenced by Cubism
Cubism

Cubism was a 20th century avant-garde art movement, pioneered by Pablo Picasso and Georges Braque, that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music and literature....
 and Expressionism. He started to organise and participate in lecture tours with other members of the international avant-garde, such as Hans Arp, Raoul Hausmann and Tristan Tzara, touring Czechoslovakia, Holland, and Germany with provocative evening recitals and lectures.

Schwitters published a periodical, also called Merz, between 1923-32, in which each issue was devoted to a central theme. Merz 5, 1923, for instance, was a portfolio of prints by Hans Arp, Merz 8/9, 1924, was edited and typeset by El Lissitsky, Merz 14/15, 1925, was a typographical children's story entitled The Scarecrow by Schwitters, Kätte Steinitz and Theo Van Doesburg. The last edition, Merz 24, 1932, was a complete transcription of the final draft of the Ursonate, with typography by Jan Tschichold.

His work in this period became increasingly Modernist in spirit, with far less overtly political context and a cleaner style, in keeping with contemporary work by Hans Arp and Piet Mondrian
Piet Mondrian

Pieter Cornelis Mondriaan, after 1912 Mondrian, , was a Dutch people Painting.He was an important contributor to the De Stijl art movement and group, which was founded by Theo van Doesburg....
. His friendship around this time with El Lissitzky proved particularly influential, and Merz pictures in this period show the direct influence of Constructivism
Constructivism (art)

Constructivism was an artistic and architecture movement that originated in Russia from 1919 onward which rejected the idea of "art for art's sake" in favour of art as a practice directed towards social purposes....
.

Thanks to Schwitters' lifelong patron and friend Katherine Dreier, his work was exhibited regularly in the US from 1920 onwards. In the late 1920s he became a well-known typographer; his best-known work was the catalogue for the Dammerstocksiedlung in Karlsruhe
Karlsruhe

Karlsruhe is a city in the south west of Germany, in the States of Germany Baden-W?rttemberg, located near the France-German border.Founded in 1715 as Karlsruhe Palace, the surrounding town became the seat of two of the highest courts in Germany, the Federal Constitutional Court of Germany whose decisions have the force of a law, and the...
. After the demise of Der Sturm Gallery in 1924 he ran an advertising agency called Merzwerbe, which held the accounts for Pelikan
Pelikan

Pelikan is a Germany manufacturer of fine fountain pens and other writing, office and art equipment, credited with the invention of the differential-piston filling method....
 inks and Bahlsen
Bahlsen

Bahlsen is a Germany food company based in Hanover. It was founded in July 1889 by Hermann Bahlsen as the Hannoversche Cakesfabrik H. Bahlsen. It produces a range of biscuits and snack foods such as potato chips....
 biscuits, amongst others, and became the official typographer for Hannover town council between 1929 and 1934. Many of these designs, as well as test prints and proof sheets, were to crop up in contemporary Merz pictures. In a manner similar to the typographic experimentation by Herbert Bayer
Herbert Bayer

Herbert Bayer was an Austrian graphic designer, painter, photographer, and architect.Bayer apprenticed under the artist Georg Schmidthammer in Linz....
 at the Bauhaus
Bauhaus

' is the common term for the ', a school in Germany that combined crafts and the fine arts, and was famous for the approach to design that it publicized and taught....
, and Jan Tschichold
Jan Tschichold

Jan Tschichold was a typography, book designer, teacher and writer....
's Die neue Typographie, Schwitters experimented with the creation of a new more phonetic alphabet in 1927. Some of his types were cast and used in his work.. In the late 1920s Schwitters joined the Deutscher Werkbund
Deutscher Werkbund

The Deutscher Werkbund was a Germany association of artists, architects, designers, and industrialists. The Werkbund was to become an important event in the development of modern architecture and industrial design, particularly in the later creation of the Bauhaus school of design....
 (German Work Federation).

The Merzbau

Alongside his collages, Schwitters also dramatically altered the interiors of a number of spaces throughout his life. The most famous was The Merzbau, the transformation of six (or possibly more) rooms of the family house in Hannover, Waldhausenstrasse 5. This took place very gradually; work started in about 1923, the first room was finished in 1933, and Schwitters subsequently extended the Merzbau to other areas of the house until he fled to Norway in early 1937. Most of the house was let to tenants, so that the final extent of the Merzbau was less than is normally assumed. On the evidence of Schwitters' correspondence, by 1937 it had spread to two rooms of his parents' apartment on ground floor, the adjoining balcony, the space below the balcony, one or two rooms of the attic and possibly part of the cellar. In 1943 it was destroyed in a bombing raid.

Early photos show the Merzbau with a grotto-like surface and various columns and sculptures, possibly referring to similar pieces by Dadaists, including the Great Plasto-Dio-Dada-Drama by Johannes Baader
Johannes Baader

Johannes Baader , originally trained as an architect, was a writer and artist associated with Dada in Berlin.He was born in Stuttgart, Germany, and died in Schloss Adeldorf, Lower Bavaria....
, shown at the first International Dada Fair, Berlin, 1920. Work by Hannah Höch, Raoul Hausmann and Sophie Tauber, amongst others, were incorporated into the fabric of the installation. By 1933, it had been transformed into a sculptural environment, and three photos from this year show a series of angled surfaces aggressively protruding into a room painted largely in white, with a series of Tableaux spread across the surfaces. In his essay 'Ich und meine Ziele' in Merz 21, Schwitters referred to the first column of his work as the Cathedral Of Erotic Misery. There is no evidence that he used this name after 1930, however. The first use of the word 'Merzbau' occurs in 1933.

Photos of the Merzbau were reproduced in the journal of the Paris-based group abstraction-création in 1933-4, and were exhibited in MoMA in New York in late 1936.

The Sprengel Museum
Sprengel Museum

The Sprengel Museum in Hanover houses one of the most significant collections of modern art in Germany. It is located in a building designed by Peter Trint and Ursula Trint and Dieter Quast adjacent to the Maschsee....
 in Hanover
Hanover

Hanover or Hannover#Definitions , on the river Leine, is the capital city of the Federal states of Germany of Lower Saxony , Germany and was once by personal union the family seat of the House of Hanover, in their dignities as the dukes of Brunswick-L?neburg ....
 has a reconstruction of the first room of the 'Merzbau,.

Schwitters later created a similar environment in the garden of his house in Lysaker
Lysaker

Lysaker is a section of and a postal code area of the Norway Municipalities of Norway of B?rum, just west of Oslo.Geographically, it is bordered by Lysakerelven on the east, which also forms the border to Oslo; Fornebu to the south; Stabekk to the west; and Jar, Norway to the north....
, near Oslo
Oslo

is the Capital and largest List of cities in Norway in Norway.Metropolitan Oslo or the Greater Oslo Region makes up the third largest urban area in Scandinavia after Metropolitan Stockholm and Metropolitan Copenhagen....
, known as the Haus am Bakken (the house on the slope). This was almost complete when Schwitters left Norway
Norway

Norway , officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a constitutional monarchy in Northern Europe that occupies the western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula....
 for England in 1940. It burnt down in 1951 and no photos survive. The last Merzbau, in Elterwater
Elterwater

Elterwater is a small lake that lies half a mile south-east of the village of the same name. Both are situated in valley of Great Langdale in the English Lake District....
, Cumbria
Cumbria

Cumbria is a non-metropolitan county in the North West England of England. Cumbria came into existence as a county in 1974 after the passage of the Local Government Act 1972....
, England, remained incomplete on Schwitters' death in January 1948. A further environment that also served as living space can still be seen on the island of Hjertoya near Molde
Molde

Molde is a city and Municipalities of Norway in M?re og Romsdal Counties of Norway, Norway. It is part of the Romsdal Districts of Norway.Molde is the administrative center of M?re og Romsdal county, the commercial hub of Romsdal, and the host of the diocese of M?re....
, Norway. It is sometimes described as a fourth Merzbau, although Schwitters himself only ever referred to three.

The Ursonate


Schwitters composed and performed an early example of sound poetry
Sound poetry

Sound poetry is a form of literary or musical composition in which the phonetic aspects of human speech are foregrounded at the expense of more conventional semantic and syntax values; "verse without words"....
,
Ursonate (1922-32; a translation of the title is Original Sonata or Primeval Sonata). The poem was influenced by Raoul Hausmann's poem "fmsbw" which Schwitters' heard recited by Hausmann in Prague
Prague

Prague is the Capital and World's largest cities of the Czech Republic. Its official name is Hlavn? mesto Praha, meaning Prague, the Capital City....
, 1921. Schwitters performed the piece regularly, developing and extending it, until finally publishing his notations for the recital in the last Merz periodical, 1932.

Exile


Norway and Great Britain

The political situation in Germany under the Nazis continued to deteriorate throughout the 1930s; he lost his contract with Hannover Town Council in 1934 and examples of his work in German museums were confiscated and publicly ridiculed in 1935. By the time his close friends Christof and Luise Spengemann and their son Walter were arrested by the Gestapo
Gestapo

The was the official secret police of Nazi Germany. Under the overall administration of the Schutzstaffel , it was administered by the Reichssicherheitshauptamt and was considered a dual organization of the Sicherheitsdienst and also a suboffice of the Sicherheitspolizei ....
 in August 1936 the situation had clearly become perilous.

On 2 January 1937 Schwitters, wanted for an 'interview' with the Gestapo, fled Hannover to join his son Ernst in Norway, who had already left Germany on the 26th December, 1936. His wife Helma decided to remain in Hannover, to manage their four properties. In the same year, his
Merz pictures were included in the Nazi exhibition titled "entartete Kunst
Degenerate art

Degenerate art is the English translation of the German language entartete Kunst, a term adopted by the Nazi regime in Germany to describe virtually all modern art....
" in Munich, making his return impossible. Helma visited for a few months each year up to the outbreak of World War II. The joint celebrations for his mother Henriette's 80th birthday and his son Ernst's engagement, held in Oslo on 2 June 1939, would be the last time the two met.

Schwitters started a second
Merzbau while in exile in Lysaker
Lysaker

Lysaker is a section of and a postal code area of the Norway Municipalities of Norway of B?rum, just west of Oslo.Geographically, it is bordered by Lysakerelven on the east, which also forms the border to Oslo; Fornebu to the south; Stabekk to the west; and Jar, Norway to the north....
 nearby Oslo
Oslo

is the Capital and largest List of cities in Norway in Norway.Metropolitan Oslo or the Greater Oslo Region makes up the third largest urban area in Scandinavia after Metropolitan Stockholm and Metropolitan Copenhagen....
, Norway
Norway

Norway , officially the Kingdom of Norway, is a constitutional monarchy in Northern Europe that occupies the western portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula....
 in 1937 but abandoned it in 1940 when the Nazis
Nazi Germany

Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the colloquial English names for Germany under the regime of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party , which established a Totalitarianism dictatorship that existed from 1933 to 1945....
 invaded; this Merzbau was subsequently destroyed in a fire in 1951. His hut on the Norwegian island of Hjertoya, near Molde
Molde

Molde is a city and Municipalities of Norway in M?re og Romsdal Counties of Norway, Norway. It is part of the Romsdal Districts of Norway.Molde is the administrative center of M?re og Romsdal county, the commercial hub of Romsdal, and the host of the diocese of M?re....
, is also frequently regarded as a Merzbau. This building has been more or less left to rot since 1940.

After a short period of internment on the Lofoten Islands, Schwitters fled to Scotland
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 with his son on the icebreaker Fridtjof Nansen between 8th and 18th June 1940. By now an enemy alien, he was moved between various internment camps in Scotland and England before ending up spending a year and a half in Douglas Camp, Isle of Man
Isle of Man

The Isle of Man , or Mann , is a self-governing Crown dependency, located in the Irish Sea at the geographical centre of the British Isles....
. Whilst there, he staged regular
Merz recitals, including a performance of Silence, his first poem in English, but was apparently seen as a somewhat pathetic irrelevant figure by other artists at the camp.
"I am now the last artist here- all the others are free. But all things are equal. If I stay here, then I have plenty to occupy myself. If I am released, then I will enjoy freedom. If I manage to leave for the U.S., then I will be over there. You carry your own joy with you wherever you go." Letter to Helma Schwitters, April 1941.
After intervention from Alexander Dorner, Rhode Island School of Design
Rhode Island School of Design

The Rhode Island School of Design is a fine arts and design college located in Providence, Rhode Island. It was founded in 1877 and is currently located at the base of College Hill, Providence, Rhode Island and contiguous with the Brown University campus....
, Schwitters was finally released on the 21st November 1941. He spent time in London, then in 1945 moved to the Lake District
Lake District

The Lake District, also known as The Lakes or Lakeland, is a rural area in North West England. A popular holiday destination, it is famous for its lakes and its mountains , and its associations with the early 19th century poetry and writings of William Wordsworth and the Lake Poets....
, where, in August 1947, he began work on the last Merzbau, which he called the
Merzbarn. Made possible by a grant from MOMA
Moma

Moma may refer to:* Moma , an owlet moth genus* Moma Airport, a Russian public airport* Moma District, Nampula, Mozambique* Moma River, a right tributary of the Indigirka River...
 that had originally been intended to help restore the Hannover original, one wall of this last structure is now in the Hatton Gallery
Hatton Gallery

The Hatton Gallery is Newcastle University's art gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne, England, and is a part of the Great North Museum....
 in Newcastle
Newcastle upon Tyne

Newcastle upon Tyne is a City status in the United Kingdom and metropolitan borough of Tyne and Wear, in North East England. Situated on the north bank of the River Tyne, the city developed from a Roman Empire settlement called Pons Aelius, though it owes its name to the Newcastle Castle built in 1080, by Robert Curthose, the eldest son of...
; the shell of the barn remains in Elterwater, near Ambleside
Ambleside

Ambleside is a town in Cumbria, in north-west England.It is situated at the head of Windermere , England's largest lake. The town is within the Lake District National Park....
.

His wife Helma died of cancer on 29 October 1944, although Schwitters only heard of her death in December; at about the same time, he discovered that the
Merzbau had been destroyed during an allied air raid. After his son returned to Norway, he left London with his new companion, Edith Thomas, (known as 'Wantee' for her habit of always asking guests if they'd like a cup of tea) for the Lake District on 27 June 1945.

The last years

Cut off from the centres of the European Avant-Garde
Avant-garde

Avant-garde means "advance guard" or "vanguard". The adjective form is used in English, to refer to people or works that are experimental or innovative, particularly with respect to art, culture, and politics....
, and with International Modernism beleaguered by rising tides of nationalism across Europe, Schwitters' work in exile became increasingly organic, with natural forms and muted colours replacing the mass produced ephemera of previous years. Pictures such as
Small Merzpicture With Many Parts 1945-6 used objects found on a beach, including pebbles and smooth shards of porcelain.

After the war, his friend Käte Steinitz started to send letters back to Schwitters from the United States, where she had emigrated in 1936. She described life in the emerging consumer society, and wrapped the letters in pages of comics
Comics

Comics is a graphic Mass media in which are utilized in order to convey a sequential narrative; the term, derived from massive early use to convey comic themes, came to be applied to all uses of this medium including those which are far from comic....
 to give a flavour of the new world. She encouraged Schwitters to 'Merz' this ephemera, the result of which was a sequence of proto-pop art
Pop art

Pop art is a visual art movement that emerged in the mid 1950s in UK and in the late 1950s in the United States. Pop art challenged tradition by asserting that an artist's use of the mass-produced visual commodities of popular culture is contiguous with the perspective of Fine Art since Pop removes the material from its context and isolates...
 pictures such as
For Käte, 1947.

Plagued by health problems in his remaining years, including temporary blindness in 1946 and a number of strokes, Schwitters died in Kendal
Kendal

Kendal is a market town and civil parish within the South Lakeland district of Cumbria, England. It is south of Carlisle, on the River Kent, and has a total resident population of 27,521, making it the third largest settlement in Cumbria ....
, England, January 8th, 1948, of a heart attack, and was buried in Ambleside
Ambleside

Ambleside is a town in Cumbria, in north-west England.It is situated at the head of Windermere , England's largest lake. The town is within the Lake District National Park....
. His grave was unmarked until 1966 when a stone was erected with the inscription
Kurt Schwitters – Creator of Merz. The stone remains as a memorial even though his body was later disinterred and reburied in Hannover, Germany, the grave being marked with a marble copy of his 1929 sculpture Die Herbstzeitlose.

Posthumous reputation


Influences

Many artists have cited Schwitters as a major influence, including Ed Ruscha, Robert Rauschenberg
Robert Rauschenberg

Robert Rauschenberg was an American artist who came to prominence in the 1950s transition from Abstract Expressionism to Pop Art. Rauschenberg is perhaps most famous for his "Combines" of the 1950s, in which non-traditional materials and objects were employed in innovative combinations....
, Damien Hirst
Damien Hirst

Damien Steven Hirst is an England artist and the most prominent member of the group known as "Young British Artists" . Hirst dominated the art scene in Britain during the 1990s and is internationally renowned....
, Al Hansen
Al Hansen

Al Hansen was an United States artist considered as one of the most important Fluxus figures. He was a Norwegian American.Born in New York City, he was a member of the Fluxus art movement and friend to Yoko Ono and John Cage....
, and Arman
Arman

Arman , was a France-born United States artist. Born Armand Pierre Fernandez in Nice, France, Arman is a painter who moved from using the objects as paintbrushes to using them as the painting itself....
.
"The language of Merz now finds common acceptance and today there is scarcely an artist working with materials other than paint who does not refer to Schwitters in some way. In his bold and wide-ranging experiments he can be seen as the grandfather of Pop Art, Happenings, Concept Art, Fluxus, multimedia art and post-modernism." Gwendolyn Webster


Marlborough Gallery controversy

Schwitters' son, Ernst, largely entrusted the artistic estate of his father to Gilbert Lloyd, director of the Marlborough Gallery. However, Ernst fell victim to a crippling stroke in 1995, moving control of the estate as a whole to Kurt's grandson, Bengt Schwitters. Controversy erupted when Bengt, who has said he has "no interest in art and his grandfather's works", terminated the standing agreement between the family and the Marlborough Gallery. The Marlborough Gallery filed suit against the Schwitters estate in 1996, after confirming Ernst Schwitters' desire to have Mr. Lloyd continue to administer the estate in his will.

Professor Henrick Hanstein, an auctioneer and art expert, provided key testimony in the case, stating that Schwitters was virtually forgotten after his death in exile in England in 1948, and that the Marlborough Gallery had been vital in ensuring the artist's place in art history. The verdict, which was eventually upheld by Norway's highest court, awarded the gallery USD 2.6 million in damages.

Archival and forgeries

Schwitters' visual work has now been completely catalogued in the . Forgeries of collages by Schwitters turn up almost weekly on eBay. Before purchasing any work supposedly by Schwitters, it is best to consult the Kurt Schwitters Archive at the Sprengel Museum in Hannover, Germany.

Legacy

  • Brian Eno
    Brian Eno

    Brian Peter George St. John le Baptiste de la Salle Eno , commonly known as Brian Eno , is an England musician, composer, record producer, music theory and singer, who, as a solo artist, is best known as the People known as the father or mother of something of ambient music....
     sampled
    Sampling (music)

    In music, sampling is the act of taking a portion, or sample, of one sound recording and reusing it as an musical instrument or a different sound recording of a song....
     Schwitters recording of
    Ursonate for the "Kurt's Rejoinder" track on his 1977 album, Before and after Science
    Before and after Science

    Before and after Science is a 1977 album by Brian Eno. It is less experimental than its predecessor Another Green World, containing eight songs and just two instrumentals....
    .
  • Japanese musician Merzbow
    Merzbow

    is a noise music project created in Tokyo, Japan in 1979 under the direction of musician . Since 1979, he has formed two record labels and has contributed releases to numerous independent record labels....
     took his name from Schwitters.
  • A fictionalised account of Schwitters time in London is the subject of an opera
    Opera

    Opera is an Performing arts in which singers and musicians perform a dramatic work which combines a text and a musical score. Opera is part of the Western classical music tradition....
     by Michael Nyman
    Michael Nyman

    Michael Laurence Nyman, Order of the British Empire is an England composer of minimalist music, pianist, libretto and musicologist, perhaps best known for the many movie soundtrack he wrote during his lengthy collaboration with the film director Peter Greenaway, and his multi-platinum The Piano to Jane Campion's The Piano....
     and Michael Hastings
    Michael Hastings (playwright)

    Michael Gerald Hastings is a United Kingdom playwright, screen-writer, and occasional novelist and poet.He is probably best known for his 1984 play about the poet T.S....
    ,
    Man and Boy: Dada
    Man and Boy: Dada

    Man and Boy: Dada is a 2003 opera by Michael Nyman on a libretto by Michael Hastings . It tells the story of a friendship between aging dada artist Kurt Schwitters and a twelve-year-old boy....
    .
  • The German hip-hop band Freundeskreis
    Freundeskreis

    Freundeskreis also known as FK is a German hip hop group from Stuttgart, whose songs are in German language but also in English language, French language and Esperanto....
     quoted from his poem "An Anna Blume" in their hit single "ANNA".
  • The krautrock
    Krautrock

    Krautrock is a generic name for the experimental music scene that appeared in Germany in the late 1960s and gained popularity throughout the 1970s, especially in Britain....
     band Faust
    Faust (band)

    Faust is a Germany krautrock band, originally comprising Werner "Zappi" Diermaier, Hans Joachim Irmler, Arnulf Meifert, Jean-Herv? P?ron, Rudolf Sosna and Gunter W?sthoff, working with producer Uwe Nettelbeck and engineer Kurt Graupner....
     have a song entitled "Dr. Schwitters snippet".
  • Billy Childish
    Billy Childish

    Billy Childish or William Charlie Hamper is an England artist, author, poet, photographer, film maker, singer and guitarist. He is known for his explicit and prolific work - he has detailed his love life and childhood sexual abuse, notably in his early poetry and the novels My Fault , Notebooks of a Naked Youth , Sex Crimes of the Futcher...
     made a short film on Schwitters life, titled "The Man with Wheels", (1980, directed by Eugean Doyan).


External links



Sound art

  • by Kevin Concannon


Further reading

  • Burns Gamard, Elizabeth. Kurt Schwitters' Merzbau: The Cathedral of Erotic Misery, Princeton Architectural Press 2000, ISBN 1-5689-8136-8
  • Crossley, Barbara. The Triumph of Kurt Schwitters, Armitt Trust Ambleside, 2005.
  • Elderfield, John. Kurt Schwitters, Thames and Hudson, London 1985.
  • Elsner, John and Roger Cardinal (ed.), The Cultures of Collecting, Reaktion Books, London 1994.
  • Feaver, William. "Alien at Ambleside", The Sunday Times Magazine, 18 Aug 1974, 27-34, [also http://fp.armitt.plus.com/alien_at_ambleside.htm].
  • Germundson, Curt. "Montage and Totality: Kurt Schwitters’ relationship to tradition and avant-garde", in Dafydd Jones (ed.), Dada Culture: Critical Texts on the Avant-Garde, Rodopi, Amsterdam/New York 2006, 156-186.
  • Notz, Adrian and Obrist, Hans Ulrich (ed.), With contributions by Peter Bissegger, Stefano Boeri, Dietmar Elger, Yona Friedman, Thomas Hirschhorn, Karin Orchard, Gwendolen Webster.
  • Ramade, Bénédicte. (2005) Dada: L'exposition/The Exhibition, Union-Distribution. ISBN 2844262783.
  • Reichardt, Jasia (ed.) Raoul Hausmann and Kurt Schwitters, PIN, Anabas-Verlag, Giessen 1986.
  • Rothenberg, Jerome and Pierre Joris (ed.) Kurt Schwitters, poems, performance, pieces, proses, play poetics, Temple University Press, Philadelphia 1993.
  • Schwitters, Kurt (ed.) Merz 1923-32. Hanover, 1923-1932 [numbered 1-24; nos. 10, 22-23 never published: .
  • Uhlman, Fred. The Making of an Englishman, Gollancz (1960).
  • Webster, Gwendolen. Kurt Merz Schwitters, a Biographical Study, University of Wales Press 1997, ISBN 0-7083-1438-4
  • Webster, Gwendolen. in German Life and Letters 1999, vol. 52, no. 4, 443-56.
  • Exhibition catalogue, In the Beginning was Merz – From Kurt Schwitters to the Present Day, Sprengel Museum Hannover, Hatje Cantz, Ostfildern, 2000.
  • Exhibition catalogue, Kurt Schwitters in Exile: The late work, 1937-1948, Marlborough Fine Art, 1981.