BASEL.- James Ensor (18601949) was a visionary artist whose whimsical, fantastical, ironic, and occasionally aggressive oeuvre strongly influenced the art of the twentieth century. The extensive retrospective at the
Kunstmuseum Basel is based on the holdings of the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp, which has the worlds largest and most important collection of Ensors works, complemented by important works from Swiss collections. The show features representative selections both from the less well-known early oeuvre and from the period of the famous mask paintings as well as the late oeuvre, which has recently been the focus of renewed scholarly interest. With around fifty paintings, a similar number of drawings, and prints, the exhibition presents a comprehensive panorama of Ensors eminent oeuvre, which continues to inspire artists.
Masks, phantoms, skulls, skeletons, and other macabre characters gathered in bizarre situations: the work of the Belgian artist James Ensor (18601949) is whimsical, fantastical, ironic, occasionally aggressive, but also suffused with a profound sense of humor. His offbeat and baffling motifs, which highlight the absurdity of human existence, inspired artists like Alfred Kubin, Paul Klee, and the German expressionists Emil Nolde and Ernst Ludwig Kirchner as well as the Surrealists, who claimed Ensor as their ancestor. The artist himself thought that his multifaceted oeuvre anticipated all modern movements
in all directions.
In 2009, a retrospective shown at the Musée dOrsay, Paris, and the Museum of Modern Art, New York, introduced Ensors art to wide international audiences. Ensor started out as a plein-air painter and a representative of European realism and naturalism before developing a specifically Belgian variant of Symbolism. In his third and by far best-known creative period, the grotesque becomes the defining characteristic of his art. He stages European carnival masks as well as Asian masks of various provenance in bizarre settings.
Nineteenth-century art had occasionally hinted at the abysses of the human soul, thus in the inscrutable scenes of Black Romanticism or in caricatures; Ensor systematically plumbs them, exposing the absurdity and vanity of human existence in garish confrontations such as Skeletons Fighting over a Hanged Man and The Astonishment of the Mask Wouse, pictures that unite compositional ingenuity and pointed comedy with trenchant social critique.
The Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp has the worlds largest and most important collection of Ensors works. It is closed for renovations for several years, creating an opportunity to bring the entire Antwerp painting collection to Basel. The exhibition at the Kunstmuseum Basel includes around fifty paintings and as many drawings, some of which have never been on public display, and complements the Antwerp collection with paintings from Swiss collectionssome of these works have not been shown in more than seventy yearsand prints from the Kunstmuseum Basels Department of Prints and Drawings.