PAINTER.
MENTOR. MAGICIAN. Otto Mueller and his network in Wroclaw October 12, 2018 - March 3, 2019
Hamburger Bahnhof - National Gallery of the Present

Duration October 12, 2018 - March 3, 2019

Location Hamburger Bahnhof – National Gallery of the Present

An exhibition by the Nationalgalerie, Berlin State Museums, in collaboration with the Alexander and Renata Camaro Foundation.

The exhibition is supported by:
Friends of the National Gallery, Capital Cultural Fund, Cultural Foundation of the States, Ernst von Siemens Art Foundation, Foundation for German-Polish Cooperation, Prussian Sea Trade Foundation

as part of 100 years of Bauhaus.

[photo_subtitle subtitle=“Oskar Moll: Inge II in dark blue, with cigarette, 1930/32 | Private collection | © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2018 / Photo: Philipp Mansmann" img="https://freunde-der-nationalgalerie.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/MMM_Presse_Moll_Inge_II.jpg"][photo_subtitle subtitle="Oskar Schlemmer: Nude, Woman and Coming One, 1925 | State Museums in Berlin, National Gallery | © State Museums in Berlin, Nationalgalerie / Jörg P. Anders" img="https://freunde-der-nationalgalerie.de/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/MMM_Presse_Schlemmer_Akt_Frau_Kommender.jpg"]

The exhibition PAINTER. MENTOR. MAGICIAN. For the first time, the focus is on the enormous influence of the former Brücke artist and expressionist Otto Mueller (1874–1930): The painter taught for more than ten years at the State Academy of Arts and Applied Arts in Breslau, which at the time was one of the most progressive art schools in Europe . Especially since the 1920s - thanks to the numerous new appointments of the then director Oskar Moll - the Breslau Academy enjoyed a reputation for cosmopolitanism and liberality. Here, the diverse movements of modern painting stood side by side on an equal footing: Expressionism with Otto Mueller, the French Peinture of the Académie Matisse with Oskar Moll, the New Objectivity with Alexander Kanoldt and Carlo Mense, and the Bauhaus with Oskar Schlemmer, Georg Muche and Johannes Molzahn.

The main focus of the exhibition is modern painting: Otto Mueller and his network experienced a creative phase in Breslau, which they described as highly productive, stimulated by exchange and mutual influence. This influence between fellow painters becomes apparent through thematic similarities and other cross-references: in paintings, works on paper, written statements or photographs. Above all, the charismatic Otto Mueller, who was driven by longing and a thirst for freedom, had a significant influence on the Breslau art scene. According to statements from those close to him, including art critics and writers, Otto Mueller is said to have been a 'romantic' and even a 'magician'. Carl Hauptmann already memorialized him in the artist's biography “Einhart der Lächler” (1907) - in this way the poet made his decisive contribution to laying the foundations of an 'artist myth'.

Mueller's striking appearance and his unbourgeois lifestyle exerted an enormous fascination on his students at the academy. They appreciated his total dedication to art, his unconventional teaching methods and humor. Some of his students - such as Alexander Camaro and Horst Strempel - went from Breslau to Berlin and experienced the climax of their painting careers here.

A special feature of MALER's curatorial concept . MENTOR. MAGICIAN. is the principle of the 'guest': this refers to selected images through which similarities and differences can be pointed out in a spotlight-like, cross-epoch and intercultural way, especially in the German-Polish context. The inclusion of 'Polish Expressionists' enables unique visual comparisons and new connections, while at the same time intertwining the German-Polish orientation of this exhibition.

The immense appreciation of Otto Mueller's work - from the perspective of his artist network - extends into post-war modernism: an important chapter in German-Polish art history is retold with particular attention to the interrelationship between the cities of Berlin and Breslau/Wrocław.

The relationships between the National Gallery in Berlin and the former Silesian Museum of Fine Arts in Breslau (today Muzeum Narodowe in Wrocław) were also characterized by intensive exchange and collaboration. The Otto Mueller memorial exhibition, which was initiated in 1931 - shortly after the death of the important expressionist - by director Erich Wiese in Breslau and taken over as a memorial exhibition in Berlin in the same year by Ludwig Justi, director of the Nationalgalerie, is paradigmatic.

The current show MALER. MENTOR. MAGICIAN. takes the opposite route. Developed in Berlin, it will then be shown in a modified form in Breslau/Wrocław. In Berlin, the exhibition continues the series of presentations on classical modernism that were shown during the renovation of the Neue Nationalgalerie in the Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum for the Present - Berlin: “The Black Years. Stories in a collection. 1933–1945”, “Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Hieroglyphs” and “Rudolf Belling. Sculptures and Architecture”.

List of artists:
Jankel Adler, Alexander Archipenko, Isidor Aschheim, Henryk Berlewi, Alexander Camaro, Johnny Friedlaender, Grete Jahr-Queißer, Alexander Kanoldt, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Ludwig Peter Kowalski, Margarete Kubicka, Stanisław Kubicki, Wilhelm Lehmbruck, Carlo Mense, Oskar Moll, Marg Moll, Johannes Molzahn, Georg Muche, Otto Mueller, Żdzisław Nitka, Oskar Schlemmer, Willy Schmidt, Horst Strempel, Heinrich Tischler, Witkacy, among others

A comprehensive catalog of the same name will be published by Kehrer Verlag to accompany the exhibition and was developed by German and Polish scientists. Edited by Dagmar Schmengler, Agnes Kern and Lidia Głuchowska. Two separate language editions (German and Polish) will be available from October 2018. The catalog is realized by: ZEIT Foundation, Ernst von Siemens Art Foundation

1st station
October 12, 2018 - March 3, 2019, Hamburger Bahnhof - Museum für Aktuell - Berlin
2nd station April 8, 2019 -
June 30, 2019, National Museum Wrocław, Breslau