HALLE SAALE.- The Moritzburg in Halle once an archbishops residence, now the
Art Museum of Saxony-Anhalt has unique links to Lyonel Feininger. The artist used the top floor of the gate tower as his studio from 1929 to 1931. This was where the world famous series of Halle pictures, one of the pinnacles of Feiningers creative period in Germany, was started, and where he stored part of his work until 1935 following the closure of Bauhaus in Dessau.
Feiningers late work
From Halle, we are now turning our gaze to Feiningers late work, which has gained little attention to date in Europe. Painted after 1937 when he returned to the USA, this work has astoundingly never been subjected to independent, differentiated study. For many years, it was regarded entirely unjustly as a mere insignificant epilogue to his artistic oeuvre. This exhibition aims to revise this opinion, presenting Feiningers last creative period in all its complexity with over 100 works, and thus enabling a new perception of his art as a whole.
Back to America
For Lyonel Feininger, 1937 was a decisive turning point. Like so many other artists, writers and creative individuals, the pressure of Nazi cultural policy forced him to leave Germany, his beloved country of choice that had deeply affected his art and brought him recognition as a leading representative of modernism. However, unlike most of those who shared his fate, he did not go to a foreign, unknown land, but returned to the country of his youth, which he had left behind 50 years previously. Feininger spent another almost 20 years working in New York.
New Beginning with the Manhattan Pictures
It was not easy for Feininger to start anew in America, as he was as good as unknown to American audiences and seen as a German painter. The New York he arrived in was very different to the city he had left in 1887. Nearly two years passed before Feininger settled down and started painting in oils again. Yet watercolours he painted straight away in 1937 show that he had not lost his artistic potential.
While the first paintings he completed in New York in 1939 were memories of Deep and the Baltic, in 1940 he created a new and significant series with his Manhattan pictures of New Yorks tall buildings and hemmed-in streets. This very diverse series of paintings, in which Feininger captured his experience of the citys skyscrapers, created a forceful image of Americas contribution to modernist architecture. Artistically transforming the clear, geometrically defined works of engineering into atmospheric and visionary pictorial tectonics, Feininger played a very original role in twentiethcentury American painting.
Memories of the Baltic and Thuringia
The most remarkable aspect of Feiningers new beginning is the logic with which he continued his previous artistic work, with no real fracture occurring. Artistic processes that began before he left Germany are resumed in his late work, extending their European roots. Alongside the series of Manhattan compositions, it is the memories of the coasts of the Baltic and the villages of Thuringia that determine the themes of his late work. Yet he did not paint these motifs as a nostalgic reversion to the past, but out of a lack of suitable motifs from his new surroundings that harboured the fantastic potential he needed for his visions. As if to assure himself of his artistic origins, he returned to old compositions and yet took them into new dimensions.
Continuity and Renewal
Up to an old age, Feiningers work showed impressive continuity and above an incessant search for new ways of artistic expression. There was only ever a single instance for him, his own wanting, his unconditional striving for the final form.
The moment of recollection, turning back to older compositions or completed creative phases, guarantees the constant renewal of artistic solutions, which also existed alongside one another in differing forms of expression. Feiningers nature notes kept the motifs he had discovered for his work in Germany constantly up to date in the USA as well.
Out of Place
Feininger wrote about his feelings after returning to America in a 1939 letter to his son T. Lux: In the beginning I suffered a great deal from the feeling of being out of place. But now all I feel is a huge advantage in the fact that I was in Europe for so long. That is where my work sources its impulse. In Germany, Feininger was always seen as an American; back in America, he was a European and an outsider. This was what defined his exceptional position. He was equally at home in the two cultures, and could thus use each ones achievements for his artwork. In both places, Feininger observed contemporary developments with interest and benefit for his own work. Yet he was neither a German nor an American painter. Lyonel Feininger created an oeuvre that lays claim to a special position on both sides of the Atlantic, precisely because it arose with no regard for national or cultural boundaries.