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Saturday, November 8, 2025 |
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| Guggenheim New York honors Gabriele Münter with her first U.S. retrospective in 30 years |
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Gabriele Münter, Snow and Sun (Schnee und Sonne), 1911. Oil on board, 20 × 27 1/2 in. (50.8 × 69.9 cm). University of Iowa Stanley Museum of Art, Iowa City, Gift of Owen and Leone Elliott. © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild Kunst, Bonn. Photo: Courtesy UI Stanley Museum of Art.
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NEW YORK, NY.- The Guggenheim New York presents the first monographic exhibition in the United States on the German artist Gabriele Münter (b. 1877, Berlin; d. 1962, Murnau am Stafflesee, Germany) in nearly thirty years. Münter was a critical figure in the advancement of modernism in early twentieth-century Europe. Gabriele Münter: Contours of a World focuses on her heightened Expressionist production from around 1908 to 1920, while also highlighting her later developments. The presentation comprises some sixty paintings and nineteen of her early photographs across three galleries. Taken during Münters travels around the southern and midwestern U.S. at the turn of the twentieth century, these photographs are being exhibited in this country for the first time.
Gabriele Münter: Contours of a World illuminates Münters disruptive and underrecognized practice while challenging historical narratives that have sidelined women artists. For decades, Münter has been relegated to a minor figure in the history of German Expressionism and the Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider, 191114) movement, overshadowed by her then-companion and creative partner, Vasily Kandinsky. This exhibition corrects that framing, establishing Münter as a prolific and innovative artist who created significant work across mediums and movements throughout her long career. The shows counter-canonical approach builds on the Guggenheims legacy of upending traditional art-historical frameworks and upholding radical art in all its forms.
Münters unwavering curiosity about the world around her shaped both her life and art. She wielded color and line in remarkable ways, and this spirit of exploration led her to become a uniquely international artist, says Megan Fontanella, Curator, Modern Art and Provenance, Guggenheim New York. A formative trip to the United States around the turn of the twentieth century sparked her creative vision, as she pursued art through the medium of photography. To now organize her debut exhibition at a New York museum, 125 years later, is both extraordinary and long overdue.
Münter was a distinctly modern artist who was not only deeply invested in the aesthetics and visual culture of her native Germany but also engaged with the innovations of a transnational avant-garde. The artist was a key figure of Der Blaue Reiter, the network of progressive artists, writers, and musicians who probed in diverse ways the expressive potential of color and the symbolicand often spiritualresonance of forms. She later spent the years of World War I in Scandinavia, prompting a rich exchange with Nordic modernisms that brought shifts in her artistic practice and allegiances. With her bold planes of vibrant colors, Münter reimagined the traditional genres of still life, landscape, and portraiture, forging a compelling alternative to concurrent innovations in radical abstraction. The artist later explained, When I begin to paint, its like leaping suddenly into deep waters, and I never know beforehand whether I will be able to swim.
This landmark exhibition also spotlights early photographs taken during Münters 18981900 travels in the United States, marking her first foray into the medium. Using a No. 2 Bulls-Eye Kodaka popular box camera at the timeshe captured family members, neighbors, and townsfolk. These photographs, which never saw the public eye during her lifetime, reveal a rich period of experimentation with light, shadow, and perspective. Pushing her practice beyond the expectations of snapshot photography, Münter generated portraits that are often composed and evocative of contemporary studio portraiture of the time. Together, they offer insight into a formative moment in the artists careera time that laid the foundation for her artistic vision and the work that followed.
Despite Münters significance, only a handful of dedicated English-language monographs have been published on her work. The accompanying Guggenheim exhibition catalogue introduces new scholarship that illuminates her pioneering and underexamined practice. An introductory essay situates Münter within the artistic circles that fostered her development and explores the social and political forces that, at times, hindered it. A persuasive case is made for viewing her earliest photographs as foundational to her subsequent artistic practice, while other texts trace the transformations of the artists practice during her World War I exile in Scandinaviaher most successful period in terms of exhibition makingand examine the crosscurrents that informed her work. Finally, close examinations of lesser-known paintings in the artists oeuvre demonstrate the breadth of her subjects and the complex dynamics embodied in her gaze.
Gabriele Münter: Contours of a World is organized by Megan Fontanella, Curator, Modern Art and Provenance, Guggenheim New York. The photography selection is cocurated with Victoria Horrocks, Curatorial Fellow, Photography, Guggenheim New York.
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