Villa R Explained

Image Upright:1.3
Villa R
Medium:oil on wooden panel
Artist:Paul Klee
Year:1919
Height Metric:26.5
Width Metric:22.4
Museum:Kunstmuseum Basel
City:Basel

Villa R is an oil-on-carton painting from 1919 by the Swiss-born German artist Paul Klee.[1]

Description

The work depicts a white villa standing beside a red road winding into the mountains beyond.[2] A full moon is shining yellow overhead. In the foreground is a large capital letter R which appears to be a part of the landscape. The red road forms a diagonal across the painting and a row of green shapes, including the green letter R, form a second intersecting diagonal. The villa is positioned at the intersection.

Title

The significance of the letter R is not revealed in the painting's title, but is believed to stand for Rosa. Klee had seen the Villa Rosa in the early 1900s on his travels through Italy, accompanied by Goethe's travel diary Italian Journey.[3]

Degenerate Art

In 1939 the painting was confiscated from an art gallery in Frankfurt-am-Main by the Nazis as "degenerate art" and sent with other confiscated works in the Degenerate Art auction by the Fischer gallery in the Grand Hotel National in Lucerne, Switzerland. There it was sold to its current owners, the Kunstmuseum Basel.[4]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Paul Klee. Kunstmuseum Basel. 22 January 2020.
  2. Book: Kreis, Georg . Entartete Kunst für Basel . Wiese Verlag . 1989 . 3909158315 . Basel . 130–133 . de.
  3. Web site: Villa R. University of Iowa. 22 January 2020.
  4. Web site: PAUL KLEE UND DIE »ENTARTETE KUNST«. Zentrum Paul Klee. 22 January 2020.