Once more, Dutch artist Paul Citroen.
|
Marianne Breslauer: Paul Citroen, Berlin, 1928 |
Roelof Paul
Citroen (1896 – 1983) was a German-born Dutch artist, art
educator and co-founder of the New Art Academy in Amsterdam. Among his
best-known works are the photo-montage Metropolis and 1949 Dutch postage
stamps.
|
Selfportrait, ca. 1939 |
Citroen was
born and grew up in a middle-class family in Berlin. Both his parents were
Dutch Jews. His father owned a fur shop. At an early age, Citroen began
drawing, provoking strong support from his parents. He soon started to
experiment with photography with Erwin Blumenfeld and studied art in Berlin.
|
Working on portrait of wife Christi Frisch |
In 1919 Citroen
began studying at the Bauhaus, where he started taking lessons from Paul Klee
and Wassily Kandinsky (part of Der Blaue Reiter) and Johannes Itten, who became
one of his biggest influences. Around this time, he started Metropolis (1923),
which became his best-known piece. Citroen's Metropolis influenced Fritz Lang
to make his classic film Metropolis. Between 1929 and 1935, Citroen made many
photographs, clearly influenced by his work with Blumenfeld.
|
Portrait by Yoke Matze |
He soon started
up the Nieuwe Kunstschool (New Art School) with Charles Roelofsz. It ran out of
money and closed down in 1937. That year, Citroen became a scholar at the Royal
Academy of Art in The Hague. Among his many students are Kees Bol, Madeleine
Gans, Henk Hartog, and Jos Zeegers. He designed his monumental postage stamps
in 1949. In 1960 he stopped teaching and started painting portraits as his main
focus. He painted portraits of famous Dutch people, including a well-known
portrait of Liesbeth List in 1979.
Paul Citroen
died in 1983 in Wassenaar.
No comments:
Post a Comment