Honigpumpe am Arbeitsplatz (Originalgrafik: Free International University, Nrs. 1-10)
Honigpumpe am Arbeitsplatz (Originalgrafik: Free International University, Nrs. 1-10)
Artist
Joseph Beuys
German, 1921-1986
Printer
Gerhard Steidl, Göttingen
Date1977
Dimensionsenvelope: 6 3/16 x 4 1/2 x 1/8 in. (157 x 114 x 3mm)
card: 5 15/16 x 4 3/16 in. (151 x 106mm)
card (some cards oriented vertically): 10.5 x 14.8 cm (4 1/8 x 5 13/16 in.)
card: 5 15/16 x 4 3/16 in. (151 x 106mm)
card (some cards oriented vertically): 10.5 x 14.8 cm (4 1/8 x 5 13/16 in.)
MediumReproductions: 10 postcards with photolithographs of photographs
Text: photolithography in black on white cardstock
ClassificationBooks
Credit LineGift of Molly and Walter Bareiss
Object number
1988.113A-K
Not on View
Collections
Exhibition HistorySplendid Pages: The Molly and Walter Bareiss Collection of Modern Illustrated Books, Feb. 14--May 11, 2003Label TextJoseph Beuys Multiples While in the German air force during World War II, Joseph Beuys almost died in a plane crash in the frozen Crimean peninsula in the Ukraine. He survived because someone wrapped him in felt and an insulating layer of animal fat. As a result of this experience, these materials later became recurring motifs in his works, symbolizing warmth. They also symbolize spiritual warmth, the genesis of change, and/or a spiritual awakening. After the war Beuys became an artist, teaching at the Düsseldorf Academy beginning in 1961. Eleven years later the administration dismissed him because of his unorthodox teaching methods. In response, Beuys founded his own school, the Free International University, where he could teach and create art. Part of his theories of freedom and democracy included the production of multiples—a work of art that could be reproduced many times. With his multiples, Beuys hoped his art and his ideas would reach a large number of people. Beuys often used commonplace materials and drab colors, believing they would evoke a colorful world within the viewer. For him, it did not matter if the multiples were not easily or fully understood. He said, “…the multiples are often quite minimal allusions, just suggestions.”- Works on Paper
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