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Bleibtreustraße 45, 10623, Berlin, Germany
Open: Tue-Sat 11am-6pm


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Karel Appel: Encounter in Spring and what follows

Galerie Max Hetzler, Bleibtreustraße 45, Berlin

Fri 13 Jan 2023 to Sat 25 Feb 2023

Bleibtreustraße 45, 10623 Karel Appel: Encounter in Spring and what follows

Tue-Sat 11am-6pm

Artist: Karel Appel

curated by Franz W. Kaiser

Galerie Max Hetzler presents Encounter in Spring and what follows, an exhibition of work by Karel Appel (1921–2006), centring around a selection of paintings spanning from 1958 until 2006.

Installation Views

A founding figure of the avant-garde group CoBrA (1948–1951), Appel began his career in the aftermath of the Second World War. Over the course of six decades, the artist experimented widely, drawing on sources as diverse as folk art, outsider art and Jazz’s spirit of improvisation, and working across painting, sculpture, drawing, and stage design. Distinguishable for his astonishing capacity to innovate, Appel never settled in a signature style, media or subject. Alternating between abstraction and figuration, he adopted a material-oriented approach in his practice and promoted a genuine form of expression.

The exhibition’s starting point is the monumental and mesmeric painting Rencontre au printemps (Encounter in Spring), which was commissioned in 1958 for the inauguration of the UNESCO headquarters in Paris. To mark the occasion, UNESCO invited Appel – among luminaries including Jean Arp, Alexander Calder, Isamu Noguchi, Roberto Matta, Joan Miró, Henry Moore, and Pablo Picasso – to make a contribution. Appel painted the ambitious work, not on-site or in his Paris studio, which couldn’t accommodate its size, but in Sam Francis’ studio in Villejuif. He had, by this point, just returned from his first trip to New York for his second exhibition at Martha Jackson Gallery and was profoundly marked by his encounter with the painters of the New York School. As such, Encounter in Spring constitutes Appel’s first painting on such a momentous scale and remains one of the highlights of the UNESCO art collection.

Appel executed a sister painting, Encounter of Worlds, of the same size and year, which is in the collection of the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin. Key works in his oeuvre, the paintings introduce a pictorial language that comes very close to abstraction and is animated by the same spirit of Action Painting. While they might seem a far cry from CoBrA, founded only ten years earlier in Paris, both imply, at their essence, its rallying creed for freedom and spontaneity.

As its title suggests, the sweeping abstract gestures of Encounter in Spring seem to unfurl beneath the viewer’s gaze into an abundance of forms found in nature and landscapes. Treading the threshold between impression and expression, Appel consistently associated real-world experience with what is visible on the canvas and what to a cursory glimpse might appear abstract. This liminal quality binds the works that comprise this exhibition. Viewed in chronological sequence, they reveal the overarching influence of Appel’s discovery of American painting on his first visit to the continent in 1957, and beyond. This is strikingly evident in the richly textured surface of Shattered World, 1960, with its thick with impasto paint that appears to have been applied directly from the tube to the left side of the canvas, as much as the primitively rendered face which emerges from the crude brushstrokes and vibrant palette of Visage-Paysage no.4, 1977.

In the Trees series from 1979, Appel’s formerly expressive free lines and solid areas of monochrome brushwork are here substituted for simplified, nearly analytical structures made from a sequence of short parallel brush marks which converge on ascending, vertical formats. The artist had previously come cross enlarged reproductions of details from paintings by Vincent van Gogh – a discovery which paved the way for this new sense of expression, merging discipline with spontaneity. In the late ’90s, works including Up to the Sky no.3, 1998, and Birth of a Landscape, 1999, present densely animated, near-impressionist landscapes, which pulsate with thick swathes of paint. By the 2000s, Appel’s idiom had evolved once more into looser compositions of colour and form: works such as Nimble Acrobat, 2000, and Thought's Boomerang, 2000, appear light and airy, with large swathes of raw canvas still visible, while in Evening Forest, 2003, real wood branches are embedded on the surface of the work. Brimming with creative innovation, this exhibition encapsulates the work of an artist whose imaginative and experimental approach to the painterly medium never ceased.

The exhibition will be accompanied by a joint-publication for previous exhibitions of Karel Appel’s work at Galerie Max Hetzler: Paris/New York in London (2022); Object Paintings in Berlin (2021); and Late Nudes, 1985–1995 in Berlin (2020).

We would like to thank the Estate of Karel Appel for their generous support.

Karel Appel (1921–2006) lived and worked in Paris and New York, among other places. Retrospective exhibitions of the artist’s work have been held at the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris in 2017; and the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague, in 2016. Further solo exhibitions have been held at important institutions worldwide, including the Emil Schumacher Museum Hagen; The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C. (both 2016); Staatliche Graphische Sammlungen, Pinakothek der Moderne, München (2016); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2015); Museum Jorn, Silkeborg (2013); Cobra Museum, Amstelveen (2008); Albertina, Vienna (2007); Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague (2005); National Museum, Belgrade; Palais des Beaux-Arts, Brussels (both 2004); Kunstforum Wien, Vienna (2002); Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam (2001); and Stedelijk Museum voor Actuele Kunst, Ghent (2000), among others.

Karel Appel’s work is represented in public collections internationally, including the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington D.C.; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Musée d’Art Moderne de Paris; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich; The Phillips Collection, Washington D.C.; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; LACMA, Los Angeles; Hara Museum ARC, Shibukawa, Gunma, Japan; and Tate, London, among others. The artist’s work is part of the collections of all major Dutch museums, in particular the Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, The Hague; Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; and the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam.

Installation view of Karel Appel, Encounter in Spring and what follows, Galerie Max Hetzler Berlin, 2022, courtesy of the artist and Galerie Max Hetzler, Berlin I Paris I London, photo: def image

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