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Word: klee (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1940-1949
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Usage:

...when the late Paul Klee was 23 and a promising Swiss painter, he decided to start all over again. "I want to be as though newborn," he wrote in his journal, "knowing nothing about Europe...." Part of his new birth was to unlearn all the techniques he had acquired for making "acceptable" pictures...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Art-for-My-Sake | 1/7/1946 | See Source »

...Klee, wanting to paint like children, knew that children paint not to make beautiful pictures, but simply for the fun of picturing what they feel-art-for-my-sake. For grownups who have little childhood left in them, Klee's work, like children's, is something pretty hard to understand...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Art-for-My-Sake | 1/7/1946 | See Source »

Last week an exhibition of Klee's calculated naivetés opened in London's Tate Gallery. In Manhattan, a new portfolio appeared (The Prints of Paul Klee; Curt Valentin, $15). Its 40 etchings and lithographs proved 40 times over that Klee, no matter how hard he tried, was no child. Some of the pictures had the bright, immediate privacy of peep shows, some were suffused with an insane glee; but all showed a controlled hand whose simplicity was as artful as a Hans Andersen fairy tale...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Art-for-My-Sake | 1/7/1946 | See Source »

...When Klee died near Locarno, in 1940, some oldsters remembered the little boy who used to see faces in the veins of his grandfather's marble-top table. His students remembered how he used to lecture at Germany's famed Bauhaus, sitting hunched over, with his back to the class. His friends remembered him stumbling silently along a beach, staring at the convolutions of a sea shell in his fist...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Art-for-My-Sake | 1/7/1946 | See Source »

...Klee, Kandinsky and Mondrian stand in somewhat the same relation to art as Gertrude Stein does to literature. Just as the unfettered Stein prose confused many a layman but benefited such popular writers as Ernest Hemingway and John Dos Passos, so the abstractionists have had a major impact on U.S. typography, advertising layout, architecture (see cut). By now, the layman, whether he knows it or not, owes a good-sized debt to the nonobjective painters...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Driven to Abstraction | 4/2/1945 | See Source »

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