press release

New York, November 22, 2006—The Museum of Modern Art launches Focus, a new series of special collection displays highlighting noteworthy aspects of the Museum’s extensive collections. The Focus series provides an opportunity for in-depth and cross-disciplinary presentations that will variously concentrate on a single artist’s achievement, on broader artistic manifestations, on particular historical moments, or on significant groupings of works. This initiative aims to animate the larger history set forth in the Painting and Sculpture galleries, ensuring that a greater number of familiar and unfamiliar works in the collection are rotated on and off view.

The first in the series, Focus: Paul Klee, is an installation of 32 paintings, prints, and drawings that spans Klee’s career from 1903 to 1940. It celebrates the depth and breadth of the artist’s achievement, while reflecting the scope of the Museum’s holdings of his work. The Museum’s commitment to Paul Klee (German, b. Switzerland, 1879–1940) dates from its first survey of his work in 1930, the year following its founding. Focus: Paul Klee is organized by Lilian Tone, Assistant Curator, the Department of Painting and Sculpture, The Museum of Modern Art, and is on view from November 22, 2006 through March 5, 2007.

Klee’s oeuvre is characterized by fluid movement between genres and categories: figurative and abstract, descriptive and narrative, openly gestural and tightly geometric, austerely linear and intensely chromatic. Focus: Paul Klee brings together iconic paintings like Around the Fish (1926) and Cat and Bird (1928) along with other superb though lesser-known examples, such as Introducing the Miracle (1916), In the Grass (1930) or Equals Infinity (1932). Each phase of the artist’s career is represented. His early experiments include etching and aquatint made in Bern such as Menacing Head (1905), and the spiritually inclined drawings proceeding from his association with the Blaue Reiter group after 1911 in Munich, such as Introducing the Miracle (1916). Later works show the technically inventive paintings and drawings made during Klee’s tenure at the Bauhaus between 1920 and 1931 in Weimar and Dessau, exemplified by Portrait of an Artist (1927). Also featured are boldly simplified works such as Intoxication (1939), created during his last seven years in Switzerland, where he took refuge from Nazi Germany before his death in 1940.

only in german

Focus
Paul Klee
Kurator: Lilian Tone