Oskar Schlemmer (left) and Willi Baumeister, Frankfurt 1929 Willi Baumeister (1889-1955) was born in Stuttgart, Germany. His father was a chimney-sweeper; his mother
was the artistically talented daughter of a decorative painter. From her family Willi received his first artistic impulses. Already as a child his most prized toys were paper and pencil. Around age 16 he decided to study at the art academy but at his father's request first trained as a decorative painter from 1905 to 1907. Already during this apprenticeship
he was admitted to the
Königliche Akademie (Royal Academy Stuttgart). There he met
Oskar Schlemmer with whom he cultivated a lifelong friendship.
Willi Baumeister, Self-Portrait in the Studio, 1911
In 1912,
Baumeister studied for three months at the
Cercle International des Beaux-Arts in Paris. After his return he moved into his first studio in Stuttgart. The next year he participated for the first time in an exhibition at the Gallery
Der Sturm in Berlin, and in 1914 produced four wall pictures for the Cologne
Werkbund Exhibition. From November 1914 to December 1918
Baumeister served in the First World War, which took him to the Balkan, Ukraine, and the Caucasus. Nonetheless, he also participated in exhibitions during the war years. In 1915 he met
Oskar Kokoschka and the architect Adolf Loos in Vienna.
Willi Baumeister, Readers under the Lamp, 1913
After the end of the war Baumeister resumed his studies at the Stuttgart Art Academy and completed them in 1922. In 1919, Baumeister joined the radical Artist Association
Novembergruppe. At this time he began sketching
stage and costume designs for performances at Stuttgart theaters and also turned to commercial graphics. Contacts in France - especially with
Fernand Léger, with whom he exhibited in Berlin in 1922, and with
Le Corbusier - made him known beyond German borders.
Willi Baumeister, Female Runner II, 1925
In 1923,
Baumeister met the artist Margarete Oehm whom he married in 1926. In 1924, his work was shown at a large exhibition of modern German art in Leningrad and Moscow. In 1926, he participated in an exhibition in New York and again traveled to Paris, which led to a large exhibition at the
Galérie d'Art Contemporain in 1927. In addition, he produced the stage design for
Händel's opera
Ariodante for the
Landestheater Stuttgart.
Baumeister was also well received in 1927 at the
Große Berliner Kunstausstellung (Great Berlin Art Exhibition) where he met Kasimir Malewitsch
. Willi Baumeister, Tennisspieler liegend, 1929
As a convinced representative of
applied art, Baumeister joined the
ring neue werbegestalter (circle of new commercial designers) in 1927 whose members included
Kurt Schwitters and other famous German typographers. But the most important event for
him - as for the entire European avant-garde - was the large 1927
Werkbund exhibition in Stuttgart with the famous
Weissenhofsiedlung (Weissenhof Housing Settlement). Here, he not only designed numerous printed materials, but also furnished a number of rooms with his works. Through these activities
Baumeister was called to the
Municipal Applied Arts School(Städelschule) in Frankfurt am Main, where he had a professorship from 1928 to 1933. Initially hired as a lecturer for commercial graphics and typography he certainly would have welcomed taking on the painting class as well. This, however, was taught by
Max Beckmann. Willi Baumeister, Rope-Jumper, 1928
In 1930,
Baumeister received the
Württemberg State Prize for the painting
Linienfigur (Line Figure). His December 1932 exhibition at
Galerie Cassirer in Berlin would be his last exhibition in Germany until 1945. At the beginning of 1933 Hitler came into power, and he received notice without further explanation that his future teaching activity would be terminated
. Following the dismissal,
Baumeister returned to Stuttgart where he initially earned his living mainly with commercial graphics. Even though he was not subject to a work prohibition, public activity as an artist would be unthinkable.
The situation right now has no prospects for us but I am solidly convinced that we will be needed one day and not the shallow canvas-knackers who bow to the authoritative opinion of the whole rabble, Baumeister wrote in a 1934 letter.
Willi Baumeister, Swimmers on the Ladder, 1929
In 1936,
Willi Baumeister met the owner of the Wuppertal lacquer Factory,
Dr. Kurt Herberts, and took a job at his company. There he worked alongside with other artists defamed by the National Socialist regime:
Franz Krause, Alfred Lörcher, Georg Muche, and
Oskar Schlemmer as well as art historian
Hans Hildebrandt. In Herberts' firm it was necessary to research ancient and modern painting techniques. Between 1933 and 1944 five publications grew out of these investigations, which were published under Dr. Kurt Herberts's name - including
10,000 Years of Painting and its Materials. From 1943 to 1944 Baumeister wrote his manuscript
Das Unbekannte in der Kunst(The Unknown in Art), which was first published in 1947.
Willi Baumeister, Painter with Palette, 1933
In 1937,
Baumeister participated in a show of
constructivist art in Basel.
The same year, four of his pictures were displayed at the notorious Munich exhibition
Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art). Concurrent to this Nazi propaganda show
, he exhibited under the title
Unabhängige Kunst (Independent Art) in Paris where he met his friends
Fernand Léger and
Le Corbusier. In 1938, Baumeister deposited a large number of pictures in the
Kunsthalle Basel (to keep them out of reach from the National Socialists), and participated in the London exile exhibition
Twentieth Century German Art. Willi Baumeister, Book Cover: Modulation and Patina, 1944
In June of 1940, Paul Klee, whom Baumeister had greatly admired and whose art had strongly inspired him to the end, died. In 1941, Baumeister was prohibited to paint and exhibit. "It isn't easy to withstand the depressions of this time. This for seven years now. Presumably I can no longer show my pictures in exhibitions. I thus work exclusively for myself alone.", he wrote in his diary. Then, in April 1943, the death of Oskar Schlemmer hit him very hard: "While the bombs fell and the gunfire roared, I still especially remembered the late friend." (Diary).
Willi Baumeister, Chumbaba, 1954
In 1943 - the factory in Wuppertal and
Baumeister's Stuttgart house were partially destroyed by bombs - he moved with his family to
Urachin the Swabian Alp. In April 1945 he fled with his wife and daughters to the house of artist-friend
Max Ackermann on Lake Constance to evade obligatory service in the
Volkssturm (People's Storm) and a possible court martial. Already a few weeks after the war's end,
Baumeisterwas engaged as director and teacher at the Stuttgart Art Academy. His reputation grew steadily.
He exhibited throughout Europe, wrote numerous articles, taught, and participated on art juries.
Willi Baumeister with his daughters Felicitas and Krista, Stuttgart 1955 In 1950, the first so-called
Darmstadt Dialogue took place. Baumeister participated in a discussion titled
The Human Image of Our Time,along with well-known art historians such as
Gustav Friedrich Hartlauband
Hans Sedlmayr, psychoanalyst
Alexander Mitscherlich, and philosopher
Theodor Adorno. In 1954 Baumeister withdrew in protest from the
German Artist Union, after belonging to its executive board since its new founding in 1950. Baumeister found that in an interview on non-representational painting,
Karl Hofer had expressed a disparaging view. This was preceded by a
polemic public debatebetween
Hofer and art critic (and
Baumeister biographer)
Will Grohmann, a vehement advocate and promoter of abstract art.
Willi Baumeister, Deutscher Künstler Bund, Exhibition Poster, 1951
On August 31, 1955 Willi Baumeister died while at work on a painting. His death came unexpectedly - he was found sitting at the easel. You should visit his excellent
official website.
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