MOELLER FINE ART
MOELLER FINE ART
Achim Moeller Ltd., founded in London in June 1972, moved to New York in October of 1984 as Moeller Fine Art Ltd. The gallery specializes in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century masterworks, and regularly organizes museum-quality exhibitions, including 'From Daumier to Matisse: French Master Drawings from the John C. Whitehead Collection,' 'Howard Wise: Exploring the New,' and 'Between Friends: Giacomo Balla + Piero Dorazio,' 'Lyonel Feininger + Mark Tobey.' Moeller Fine Art is the foremost gallery in the United States for works by German Expressionists and the Masters of the Bauhaus. For more than forty years, Achim Moeller, the gallery's principal, has helped build important and substantial private and public collections that are coherent in concept, period, and quality. Moeller Fine Art also assists individuals and institutions with collection management, insurance valuation, tax and estate planning, and auction representation.
Contact
United States
7 East 60th Street
NY 10022
NEW YORK
United States
office@moellerfineart.com
NY 10022
NEW YORK
United States
www.moellerfineart.com
Évènements
LYONEL FEININGER & MARK TOBEY: YEARS OF FRIENDSHIP 1944 - 1956
MOELLER FINE ART
From 11/10/2004 to 23/11/2004
YOUR UNCLE FEININGER COMICS, FAIRY TALES, AND TOYS
MOELLER FINE ART
From 27/04/2009 to 19/06/2009
As part of its inaugural exhibition, Moeller Fine Art Berlin presented "Your Uncle Feininger: Comics, Fairy Tales, and Toys", exploring little-known aspects in the work of Lyonel Feininger (1871-1956). For the first time, the preparatory figure and nature studies for Feininger's comic strips, The Kin-der-Kids and Wee Willie Winkie's World, were shown alongside original broadsheets from The Chicago Sunday Tribune, where they were published in 1906-1907.
The exhibition also included 68 hand-carved and painted wooden figures and houses created between 1925 and 1955. This unique group is the largest of its kind in the world, and belonged to the Feininger's eldest son, Andreas.
In 1913, Lyonel Feininger also designed a series of toy trains for the Munich manufacturer Otto Löwenstein. Due to the outbreak of the First World War, however, only the prototypes were realized. The preparatory drawings for these were only recently discovered, were shown at Moeller Fine Art Berlin for the first time. In addition, five drawings of 1908 for Hans Bondy's edition of Norwegische Volksmärchen (Norwegian Folktales) will be shown.
FROM DAUMIER TO MATISSE: FRENCH MASTER DRAWINGS FROM THE COLLECTION OF JOHN C. WHITEHEAD
MOELLER FINE ART
From 13/04/2010 to 14/05/2010
SHADOW OF THE BOTTLE RACK: ANDRÉ RAFFRAY & CLIVE BARKER
MOELLER FINE ART
From 16/09/2010 to 28/01/2011
Moeller Fine Art Berlin is pleased to present an exhibition of work by French artist André Raffray and British artist Clive Barker. Despite diverse approaches in medium and technique, both artists use appropriation as a conceptual point of departure. Appropriation refers to the taking over of a real object, or even an existing work of art, into another work of art. This exhibition explores the diversity and originality of Raffray’s and Barker’s responses to the notions of copy, appropriation and homage.
André Raffray (1925-2010), deemed “the painter of paintings”, takes art itself as the model for his work, from masterpieces by Courbet and van Gogh to Duchamp and Picasso. Completely self-taught, André Raffray started making his own art around the age of forty-five. He applied the skills he acquired at the French film studio, Gaumont, where he made “fake” paintings for movie sets. Raffray’s studied and subtle reflections on the canon of art history are almost indistinguishable from the originals, and yet entirely personal engagements with them.
The title of the exhibition “Shadow of the Bottle Rack” takes its name from Raffray’s installation created in 1993, in which he suspends Duchamp’s well-known bottle rack at an angle from the ceiling in front of a white canvas on which he himself has drawn a shadow. A related work, “First Sketch of The Large Glass by Marcel Duchamp”, 1992, is a drawing after a photograph of a drawing of Duchamp’s “Large Glass” which the artist had executed directly on the wall of his New York studio. Duchamp’s study of the Large Glass was destroyed and with this pencil reproduction Raffray resuscitated the important sketch that led to his masterpiece “The Bride Stripped Bare by Her Bachelors, Even”, or “The Large Glass”, (1915-23). Raffray’s version is composed of pencil on primed, painted plywood and will be incorporated onto the wall of the gallery. With the same technique, Raffray painted two individual portraits from Picasso’s revolutionary “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon”, while staying true to the proportions of the original. The complete version of Raffray’s own “Les Demoiselles d’Avignon” is located at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm.
“I can hardly believe it was only this year (2000) that I learned about Raffray's mind- and eye-boggling contributions to "art about art”, especially since he's been at it since the '70s. For me, he now looms large as a venerable French magician who has added dazzling tricks to the metaphysical sleights of hand of such artist-counterfeiters as de Chirico and Bidlo.” –Robert Rosenblum, ARTFORUM, December 2000, Best of 2000, about the exhibition “André Raffray: Hommage a l’art“ at Moeller Fine Art, New York
André Raffray has exhibited extensively worldwide before and after his death in Paris on 6 January 2010. From December 2009 to April 2010, the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Brest held the solo exhibition, “André Raffray: le peintre des peintures [the painter of painters],” In March 2010, the artist was included in the group exhibition “Seconde Main [second hand]” at the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. Currently, the Musée Denon in Chalon-sur-Saone's is exhibiting André Raffray, La Peinture recommencée [the painting restarted]"
Clive Barker, (b. 1940) has redefined and expanded upon Marcel Duchamp’s concept of the Ready-made. Rather than simply taking things as he finds them, Barker commissions icons of art history or Pop culture to be reproduced in gleaming materials of his choosing. Barker’s informal art education consisted of studying at Luton College of Technology and Art in 1957, and dropping out the same year. Perhaps more influential to his work was the time he spent on the assembly line of the Vauxhall car factory at Luton, where he witnessed the precision and beauty of the freshly fabricated automobiles clad in shiny metal and upholstered in sensuous leather.
Barker’s work is something of a paradox in that it questions (and at times also mocks) many of the principles of traditional, modernist art, while also instilling itself with obvious references to a great variety of art from all periods. With “Venus Escargot”, 1987, Barker playfully alludes to the classical tradition of sculpture by casting in patinated bronze the head of the Venus de Milo and covering her eyes with snails. In contrast is Barker’s Kitsch arrangement “Victorian Fruit”, 1969, composed of a bowl filled with a multitude of fruits gleaming in chrome and encased in an antique glass cover. The techniques and materials he employs, the almost heroic elevation of the commonplace, the humorous overtones and the acceptance of the banal and the kitsch all contribute to the provocative originality of Barker’s work. His aesthetic is not rooted in theory or art history, but in personal experience and a subtly developed response to celebrated images.
Clive Barker lives and works in England. In london, throughout the 1960s and 70s, He was given one-man exhibitions at Robert Fraser Gallery, Hanover Gallery, and Anthony d’Offay Gallery, in addition to a retrospective exhibition at Mappin Art Gallery, Sheffield. In 1987, London's The National Portrait Gallery a held solo exhibition of his sculptures and drawings entitled “Portraits”. In 2001, Barker showed two works in “Pop Art: US/UK Connections 1956-1966” at The Menil Collection, Houston, and, in 2004, he was included in the exhibition “Art & the 60s: This was Tomorrow” at Tate Britain. Close friends with artists Peter Blake, David Hockney, Richard Hamilton and Francis Bacon, Berker was very active in the 1960s London scene, associating with The Beatles and former girlfriend Marianne Faithfull.
BURKE + NORFOLK: PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE WAR IN AFGHANISTAN
MOELLER FINE ART
From 09/09/2011 to 25/11/2011
PAUL KLEE: EARLY AND LATE YEARS, 1894-1940
MOELLER FINE ART
From 05/05/2013 to 13/06/2013
Moeller Fine Art is pleased to announce "Paul Klee: Early and Late Years, 1894-1940," to take place in its New York gallery from 6 May - 14 June. The exhibition brings together 35 works, including loans from the Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, rarely seen examples from private collections and works for sale, highlighting seminal moments from the artist's oeuvre of the 1910s to the poignancy of his final years.
Dame, ruhend, 1911, among the earliest works in the exhibition, already shows Paul Klee (1879-1940) working in a characteristic vein of whimsical simplicity, as he depicts a woman lying under a parasol in black and white. Cubist and Futurist tendencies further refined such whimsy by 1913, and were intensified with the introduction of color following Klee's visit to North Africa the following year. Works like Städtebild, 1915 are emblematic of this new and daring palette, which Klee expertly employed to depict stacked forms condensed in a shallow space. At the same time, Klee was honing the delicate line which would come to typify his work, often heightened by poetic allusion in its content and experimentation with new media. Auserwählter Knabe, 1918, a pivotal work of this period, shows an ethereal child, suspended among hovering forms in a composition created from two pieces of primed linen cut and recombined on cardboard.
With the rise of the Nazi regime, the pathos latent in such images only deepened when Klee was dismissed from his position at The Academy of Fine Arts in Dusseldorf in 1933 and returned to his native Bern. At this time he began to see himself as a damaged fruit, as, for instance, in Beulen Birne, 1934, which once belonged to Ernest Hemingway. In this work, Klee finds a visual parallel of his inner state in an overripe pear, depicted in deepest blue. In 1935, Klee was diagnosed with scleroderma, a debilitating disease which at once forced him to face his own mortality and spurred his creative output. Klee's final years communicate the essence of his work more immediately than any other period: Das kranke Herz, 1939, displays a colorful lexicon of pained, child-like symbols with a punctured heart at its center. In der Leibeshöhle, 1940, created the year of the artist's death, depicts a black bird-like figure with an amorphous mass in its body cavity, perhaps consuming itself from within or sending inspiration out into the world.
An illustrated catalogue, including an essay by Christine Hopfengart, accompanies the exhibition.
LYONEL FEININGER: "SEEING IS EVERYTHING!"
MOELLER FINE ART
From 14/07/2021 to 14/07/2021
On July 17, 1871, 150 years ago, Lyonel Feininger was born in New York City. In celebration of this anniversary of his birth, it is my pleasure to present Lyonel Feininger: "Seeing Is Everything!" A Small Retrospective of Drawings and Watercolors, an exhibition showcasing a selection of rare drawings and watercolors by this seminal artist.
The exhibition includes 45 works that Feininger made between 1908 and 1955. Together, they provide a fresh, comprehensive look at the range of his oeuvre by showing the development of his style and motifs, from his formative years in Paris to his success as a master at the Bauhaus to his return to his native New York in 1937.