Oskar Kokoschka
Prints Available from Grafos Verlag
| In a catalogue
of works from the Oskar Kokoschka Foundation, there is a photograph from
1967 of the painter standing in front of his watercolor, holding a wet,
sharp-tipped Japanese paintbrush, with a box of watercolors next to him.
With his left hand, he is holding the pinned wove paper, on which one of
the flowers can be recognized. In this period (1960-69) he creates the late
watercolors which we offer here in lithograph form. In them, the painter
remains unusually contemporary. Kokoschka was driven to the end to create
an artistic cycle, overtaxing himself, even when his strength was ebbing.
He was attracted to the quickness of the watercolor, its contemporary spirit,
it ability to condense the eye's experience. The garden before his doors
helped him in his paintings. |
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Blumenstrauss mit Mannstreu |
There were may flowers
in his garden in Villeneuve, and the painter observed his flowers with
undivided attention, as neither the face of his friend Sviatoslav Richter
nor the beloved image of his wife Olda escaped him at that time. Portraiture
never lost its fascination for him, and his flowers also belonged somewhat
in that category. One of his paintings from 1935-37 is comparable to Bonnard's
Impressionist spatial colorism, at the same time glowing with expressiveness:
Olda portrayed in the garden, with a flower bouquet held to her bosom.
It is one of those 'private', personal paintings. Olda, at that time his
wife to be, with whom he was to flee from Prague to London in 1938. Already
in 1953, they had taken up permanent residence in Switzerland. In 1973
Kokoschka was still painting brilliant flower bouquets. He painted his
irises and fire lilies. The biographer Hans M. Wingler writes: 'Kokoschka's
temperament drew him - in intervals - again and again to the sketch-like
nature of lithography. His graphic works are, both in his later as in
his earlier periods, life reflections, reflections of a world view based
on experience.' 'Blumenstrauss
mit Mannstreu' (Bouquet with Eryngo), 1960 (CR Wingler 529) -
this is a valuable piece of European art. Congenially laid down in lithograph,
it was published by Grafos Verlag as an ambitious lithograph printed from
20 plates. An achievement which confirmed the perfection of his technique
and effects, as if the brushstrokes had just been applied to the paper.
We do not deny that these watercolors were not created by the artist with
the intention of turning them into lithographs later. The catalogue raisonné,
however, confirms the presence of these late original prints and does
honor to the high-quality transposition onto the plate under the highly
critical control of the artist.
|
Schwertlinienstrauss |
The unconditionality with which Oskar
Kokoschka laid this late watercolor, Schwertlinienstrauss
(Iris Bouquet) from 1969, with all of its strikingly fragile lightness,
onto chamois-colored Japan paper reveals his mastery (Kokoschka was 83
years old in 1969). And none of this is lost in this lithograph, printed
in 16 colors from 14 plates for Grafos (CR Wingler, 528). It was Kokoschka's
last signed print. Véronique Mauron writes: 'The watercolors of
his last period intensify the characteristic features of this technique,
i.e. the light. His Dresden works captivate through their color intensity
and the expressive use of contrasts between complementary colors, and
so those works of the 60's and 70's capture the eye for their beauty and
the splendor of the color scheme. Does Kokoschka hide a secret symbol,
an allegory among the leaves and flowers?' A question which shall remain
open here. ek
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