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100 Year Anniversary
Exhibition Tells Story of Revolutionary Art Movement
The Munich Secession
and America
Jan. 24–April 12, 2009
SEATTLE, Jan. 7, 2008—The Munich Secession, founded in 1892, was the
first in a series of Secession movements that were to sweep across
Europe and lay the foundation for the emergence of the avant-garde in
the twentieth century. From January 24 through April 12, 2009, the Frye
Art Museum will present
The Munich Secession
and America, a major survey of the leading artists of the Munich
Secession, and of the Munich Künstlergenossenschaft, the influential
artists’ association which preceded it.
Curated by Frye Foundation Scholar Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker, director
emerita of the Museum Villa Stuck in Munich, the exhibition will present
masterworks of the Munich Secession and include a number of works which
were shown in the Secession’s inaugural exhibition in 1893. Loans from
leading museums and private collections in Germany as well as key works
from the Frye Art Museum’s own Founding Collection will provide the
first overview of the Munich Secession in America since a groundbreaking
exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Art Institute of
Chicago in 1909.
Now, 100 years later, the Frye offers an opportunity to see this
exhibition and its key European loans in the U.S. In addition, the Frye
Art Museum is committing all of its galleries to this exhibition and the
companion exhibition
Transatlantic: American Artists in Germany, evidencing the
importance of, and providing a broad historical context for, the Frye
Founding Collection.
The majority of the Frye galleries will be transformed to mirror the
very first 1893 Munich Secession exhibition which revolutionized the
presentation of art with “modern”, spare installations, large expanses
of white wall space between artworks, and a golden frieze designed by
one of the founders of the Munich Secession, the Symbolist Franz von
Stuck.
The Munich Secession
and America will above all illustrate the Secessionists highly
diverse avant-garde techniques and philosophies which, along with those
of the subsequent Berlin and Vienna Secessions, laid the foundation for
modernist movements such as Symbolism, Abstraction, socially motivated
Realism and Jugendstil. In an
atmosphere of plurality, the Secessionists struggled for excellence and
held sophisticated discussions on issues of difference. They were also
committed to an international approach to art and invited as “guests”
the leading artists of the day from Europe, and from America, to
participate in their annual exhibitions.
The exhibition allows for the first time a differentiated look at the
Frye Founding Collection itself, examining its history, and its ties to
some of the leading American collections of the period. It also allows
the Frye to showcase many of its premier works by founding members of
the Munich Secession such as Franz von Stuck, Fritz von Uhde, and Hugo
von Habermann, as well as exemplary works by leading figures of the
preceding artists’ association, the
Künstlergenossenschaft, such as Franz von Lenbach and Friedrich
August von Kaulbach.
The Munich Secession
and America was organized by the Frye Art Museum in collaboration
with the Museum Villa Stuck in Munich and has been generously supported
by loans from the Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, the Bayerische
Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Neue Pinakothek and the Museum Villa Stuck in
Munich; the Berlinische Galerie – State Museum Berlin and Art Library of
the State Museums of Berlin, The Landesmuseum Mainz, The Kunstmuseum
Krefeld, The Municipal Gallery Dresden– Museums of the City of Dresden,
private collections in Germany and Italy, and the Henry Art Gallery,
Seattle.
The exhibition, featuring over seventy works of art, begins by focusing
on the artists’ association which preceded the Munich Secession, the
Munich Künstlergenossenschaft,
which, founded in 1858, organized annual exhibitions at the Glaspalast.
Included are Founding Collection works by artists such as Friedrich
August von Kaulbach, Franz von Lenbach and Mihály de Munkácsy.
The Munich Secession itself will be presented in the three Foundation
Galleries and in the large Greathouse Gallery. The work of two of the
founders of the movement, Franz von Stuck and Fritz von Uhde, will be
highlighted. As well, three paintings from the first Secession
exhibition will be included: Max Slevogt’s modern masterpiece
Wrestling School, Franz von
Stuck’s iconic Sin and the
marvelous Evening Sky by the
great innovator of Jugendstil art, design and architecture, Richard
Riemerschmid. The original Secession’s exhibition promotional poster,
designed by Franz von Stuck, will also be on view.
The remaining exhibition galleries will present masterpieces of German
Impressionism, Symbolism and Jugendstil
(a specifically German development of art nouveau). Included are works
by Ludwig Dill, Hugo von Habermann, Thomas Theodor Heine, Ludwig von
Hofmann, Albert von Keller, Gabriel von Max, Leo Putz, Hans Thoma and
Wilhelm Trübner.
Among the distinguished “guests” to the Munich Secession are the
American artist Childe Hassam and French impressionists Jean-Baptiste-Camille
Corot, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, and the French-born Alfred Sisley.
The Munich Secession
and America is accompanied by a 296-page catalogue edited by
Michael Buhrs and published by Edition Minerva, which presents new
scholarship in essays by specialists in the field: Bettina Best, Jo-Anne
Birnie Danzker, Margot Th. Brandlhuber, Horst G. Ludwig and Clelia
Segieth. The catalogue is available in the Museum Store for $55.
The Munich Secession
and America
ASSOCIATED PROGRAMS
Lectures
The Munich Secession and America
Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker, Frye Foundation scholar
Saturday, January 24, 2 pm
Munich: The “City of Art” and its
Institutions, 1825-1900
Kathleen Curran, professor of fine arts, Trinity College
Saturday, March 14, 2 pm
Challenging the Canons of Modernist Art
History: Why Look at German Impressionism?
Naomi Hume, assistant professor of art history, Seattle University
Thursday, March 19, 7 pm
Connections and Context:
Evenings on German Art and Culture
A series of lectures presented with University of Washington’s Germanics
Department and Simpson Center for the Humanities
From Strauss to
Strauss: The Beginnings of Modernism in Opera
Jane Brown, Department of Germanics, University of Washington
Thursday, February 19, 6:30 pm
Beyond von Stuck: Munich’s Role in
the Emergence of Europe’s Literary Modernism
Heidi Tilghman, Department of Germanics, University of Washington
Thursday, April 2, 6:30 pm
Gallery Talks
The Munich Secession and
America
Naomi Hume, assistant professor of art history,
Seattle University
Saturday, February 7, 2 pm
Donna Kovalenko, Frye curator of collections
Saturday, March 7, 2 pm
Jo-Anne Birnie Danzker, Frye Foundation scholar
Saturday, April 4, 2 pm
Film – Magic Lantern Talks on Film and
Art
Caligari’s
Children: The Great Age of German Cinema
A three-part series of lectures followed by film screenings hosted by
Robert Horton, film critic
Part 1
Birth (lecture with film
clips)
Sunday, January 25, 2 pm
The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari
(film screening)
Sunday, February 1, 2 pm
Part 2
Summit (lecture with film
clips)
Sunday, February 22, 2 pm
The Last Laugh (film
screening)
Sunday, March 1, 2 pm
Part 3
Retreat (lecture with film
clips)
Sunday, March 22, 2 pm
M (film screening)
Sunday, March 29, 2 pm
All programs are free. Tickets are distributed on a space-available
basis, at the Frye Information Desk, one hour prior to each event. For
more information, visit
www.fryemuseum.org.
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