The Seasons according to Friedrich Hölderlin and André Butzer
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The Seasons according to Friedrich Hölderlin and André Butzer
André Butzer. Friedrich Hölderlin. Die Jahreszeiten / The Seasons (Multilingual Edition) Hardcover – January 7, 2026.



NEW YORK, NY.- Friedrich Hölderlin is probably André Butzer’s favorite poet and ranks alongside Walt Disney and Henri Matisse among his “favorite people ever.” His identification with the poet goes even further, as Hölderlin’s day of death is Butzer’s own birthday.

As Butzer moved to Los Angeles, the land of his youthful dreams, for the first time in 2001, he got homesick. The home he longed for lay neither in the old world nor in the new. In California, he read Hölderlin’s Hyperion and was shaken: “As I read, I felt that I understood every word. I thought these words came from me.”

Butzer recognizes himself in Hölderlin’s fateful protagonist and invents the figure of the homeless Wanderer. His home is in painting, and so he sets off down “Hyperion Ave”—the street on which The Walt Disney Studio opened in 1926. According to Butzer, “Hölderlin, just like Disney, expresses longings. And these can be put to use.”

For Hölderlin, poetry is the place that makes human existence on earth possible. For Butzer, it is painting. In poetry, he finds succor to settle and reconcile the extreme contradictions of the world through his painting.

In this artist’s book, Butzer has compiled 47 poems written by Hölderlin between 1793 and 1843 on the four seasons. These poems link the cycle of the seasons with man’s path of life like a parable: the autumnal fulfillment of summer’s maturation, the blossoming of life in spring and the experienced barrenness of winter.

The poems may sound simple, but in them Hölderlin gives shape to human endurance in seemingly hopeless conditions: hope, doubt, wonder, longing, love. Matters of the heart, simple, lucid and vulnerable.

Just take Hölderlin’s beloved Diotima. In Untitled (Diotima), she gazes towards a place hidden from our view. Is she looking into her innermost self or into the inaccessible distance? Seeing her see, we recognize ourselves in her gaze.

To accompany the poems, Butzer has created 40 watercolors. His iconic characters—the Wanderer, the Woman, the Peace-Siemens—cyclically fade and reappear in the delicate colors. Each figure, each thing, each stroke, each patch and each hue of color carries itself. Yet time and again, a fragile harmony emerges from their contrary bonding.

The book does neither adhere to the chronological everyday time nor the ‘factual’ succession of the seasons. Instead, Butzer has placed the poems and watercolors intuitively, forming open constellations. This corresponds to Hölderlin’s wackily fantastic dating, in which a poem from 1843, for instance, can be attributed to 1758, 1648 or 1940. In the persistent poetic time, the past and the future are one complete whole.

In unison words and images ponder man’s dwelling upon this earth, in the humblest and most poetic way. 

The artist

André Butzer was born in Stuttgart, Germany in 1973. For more than 25 years he has painted his way through the extremes of the 20th century, exploring art, politics, and pop culture. Paintings for him are “localizations of the greatest despair and the greatest hope,” which is exactly why “they come closest to the very joy and aid we are in dire need of.” After spending several years in California, he now lives in the southwest of Berlin and is one of the most internationally recognized painters of his generation.

The author

Friedrich Hölderlin (1770–1843) immersed himself deeply in Greek poetry and philosophy, which found expression in his epistolary novel Hyperion and in his translations of Sophocles and Pindar. Following his tragic love for Susette Gontard (“Diotima”), he spent the last 36 years of his life in the so-called Tübingen Tower under the care of others. In the 20th century, he influenced philosophers like Maurice Blanchot and Martin Heidegger as well as writers like Paul Celan and Peter Handke. Today, he is revered as one of Germany’s greatest poets, who is still to be discovered internationally.

The translator

Alta L. Price is an award-winning literary translator from German and Italian into English as well as a publishing consultant specializing in literature and nonfiction. Her most recent works include: Juli Zeh’s About People (2023), Alberto Giacometti’s Time Passes Too Soon: Family Letters (2024) and Giorgio Agamben’s Hölderlin’s Madness: Chronicle of a Dwelling Life, 1806–1843 (2024).



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