KANSAS CITY, MO.- World War I, also called The Great War, was the first total war of the modern period. To commemorate the 100th anniversary of the long and bloody conflict that began during the summer of 1914,
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City gathered paintings, sculptures, drawings, prints, photographs and decorative arts by many of the most esteemed European and American modernists. World War I and the Rise of Modernism opens on December 17 and runs through July 19, 2015, walking visitors through the time period before, during and after The Great War.
Both Europe and the larger Western culture it represented were dramatically altered during World War I, said Julián Zugazagoitia, Menefee D. and Mary Louise Blackwell CEO & Director of the Nelson-Atkins. This exhibition reveals the major shift in perspective brought on by The Great War, as well as the disillusionment of an entire society.
Modernism, an international art movement, was well underway when World War I erupted, and it continued to evolve after the conclusion of the war. There are 59 works of art in World War I and the Rise of Modernism. Among the artists represented are Wassily (Vasily) Kandinsky (Russia), Mies van der Rohe and Emil Nolde (Germany), Egon Schiele (Austria), Georges Braque and Yves Tanguy (France), Giorgio de Chirico and Umberto Boccioni (Italy), Marsden Hartley and Alfred Stieglitz (United States).
All great art has the power to move us intellectually, emotionally and spiritually, said Jan Schall, Sanders Sosland Curator of Modern Art. The pure, vibrant colors of Wassily (Vasily) Kandinskys Sketch for Composition II, an extraordinary pre-war painting on loan from New Yorks Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, express the spiritual transformation he envisioned for the modern world. In contrast, the raw, angular bursts of red and green in André Massons post-war painting, The Little Tragedy, evoke the violence of conflict, while Kaethe Kollwitzs Self-Portrait reveals the artists grief in response to the battlefield death of her son, Peter.
German Expressionism, French Cubism and Italian Futurism were the three dominant Modernist styles of pre-war art. As art movements, they continued to advance after the war ended. But all were impacted by the devastation. Expressionist artist Franz Marc and Futurist artist Umberto Boccioni fought for Germany and Italy, respectively. Both died in combat.
After the war, Mies van der Rohe and Margarete Heymann-Loebenstein, working at the now-famous German Bauhaus (House of Construction), devoted themselves to the idea and process of building a new world of art, design, and architecture, governed by rational efficiency and economy. On the other hand, the French Surrealists, influenced by Freudian psychology, explored the realm of dreams and imagination, as they sought to understand the irrational forces that guide human thought and action.
We are fortunate to be able to tell this dramatic story of pre-, during-, and post-war Modernism by uniting works from the museums own collection with generous loans from the Guggenheim Museum, the National World War I Museum, and private collections, said Schall.
A timeline on one of the exhibition walls depicts highlights of the era, detailing the socio-political and art events happening at certain points before, during and after WWI.
There are two History and Art Exchange Talks, one at the Nelson-Atkins and the other at the National World War I Museum at Liberty Memorial. The institutions partnered to explore the connections between war and creativity.