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Jörg Immendorff

For All Beloved In The World


  • Walther & Franz Koenig (T&H distr)
  • Expo: 14/09/2018 - 27/01/2019, Haus der Kunst, München
  • by Okwui Enwezor, Manuel Borja-Villel
FOR ALL BELOVED IN THE WORLD is the first major exhibition catalogue devoted to the artist since he died in 2007 and will offer a thematic overview of the work of this German artist, whose identity is deeply enshrined in his home country's history and characterized by a post-war background. More than 120 works will not follow a strict chronology of the works; instead they will present the key element in the development of Immendorff's oeuvre in chapters.

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ISBN 9783960983750 | E | HB
€74,00
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Publisher Walther & Franz Koenig (T&H distr)
ISBN 9783960983750
Author(s) Okwui Enwezor, Manuel Borja-Villel
Publication date September 2018
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 300 x 260 mm
Pages 440
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Exhibition Haus der Kunst, München
Description

FOR ALL BELOVED IN THE WORLD is the first major exhibition catalogue devoted to the artist since he died in 2007 and will offer a thematic overview of the work of this German artist, whose identity is deeply enshrined in his home country's history and characterized by a post-war background. More than 120 works will not follow a strict chronology of the works; instead they will present the key element in the development of Immendorff's oeuvre in chapters. They will give a nuanced view of the artist's life and work and will include some of the rarest loans and will bring together more than four decades of the artist's work united with iconic paintings. It was not until the end of the 1970s that Immendorff (1945-2007) decided to shift his threefold existence as a political activist, teacher and painter to the side of art. The year 1976 was key in some respects; Immendorff participated in the Venice Biennale with a flyer campaign that attacked the “deprivation of personal liberty” in the GDR and called for international artistic cooperation as a vehicle to overcome it; this was followed in 1978 by the beginning of his Café Deutschland series, inspired by Renato Guttuso's Café Greco, which Immendorff had seen in an exhibition in Cologne.