The show Baselitz: Six Decades, held at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington D.C., revisits the career of German artist Georg Baselitz, "one of the most original and inventive figurative artists of his generation."
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Georg Baselitz, the man who turned the art world upside down
Georg Baselitz was thrown out of art school at the age of 18, and has fostered the image of an art world maverick ever since. To mark his 85th birthday, DW looks back at his life and work.
Image: Angelika Platen
Topsy-turvy world
Georg Baselitz is seen here in 2010, standing in front of two of his works at the Albertinum, the modern art museum in Dresden. And yes, the paintings — which brought him worldwide fame in the 1970s — are meant to be upside down.
Image: Imago/J. Haufe
Provocative beginnings
Baselitz launched his career with provocative paintings in the 1960s, at a time when the Berlin-Weissensee art school had already dismissed him for being immature. The 1962/63 painting Die grosse Nacht im Eimer (The Big Night Down the Drain), showing a masturbating male figure, is one of his most famous paintings from that period.
Image: picture-alliance/Eventpress Radke
Shaped by home
Born in 1938 as Hans-Georg Kern in the Saxon town of Deutschbaselitz, he began studying art in the mid 1950s, first in East and then in West Berlin, where he moved in 1958. As a tribute to his hometown, he began using the surname Baselitz in 1961. Above, a woman contemplates his 2016 painting Offenes Tor (Open Gate) at the White Cube contemporary art gallery in London.
Image: Imago/B. Strenske
Against ideology
Baselitz resisted the art world dogma that he encountered on both sides of the border. In the former East Germany, painting was meant to serve as a formal depiction, while in the West abstraction was prized above all else. The young painter did not feel at home with either ideology. In the end, he chose to use a different perspective to express himself, as seen here in Dinner in Dresden.
Image: Ludwig Museum/Georg Baselitz/Foto: J. Littkemann
Russian cycle
Baselitz produced more than 60 "Russian" paintings between 1998 and 2005, defamiliarizing motifs remembered from his childhood in East Germany — a belated rebellion against the dogma of Socialist realism with its strong tendency toward objectivity. He even painted the founder of the Soviet Union upside down, in the 1999 work Lenin on the Tribune, seen here.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Widmann
Disadvantageous self-portraits
In 2015, Baselitz presented eight self-portraits at the Corderie dell'Arsenale as part of the 56th Venice Biennale. A photo that, due to age, wasn't particularly enchanting, served as model for his paintings. It wasn't his first appearance at the Biennale: in 1980, Baselitz presented a wooden sculpture at the German pavilion that stirred controversy for its similarity to Adolf Hitler.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/A. Merola
Why wood?
The Biennale inspired Baselitz to turn to sculpture. "The sculptures will come into being somehow, if you devote yourself to this work," he thought. He chose wood as material, saying: "Well, the wood doesn't have a choice if I hammer at it long enough." His Dresden Women (above) were shown by the Dresden state art collection to mark the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall in 2009.
Image: Imago/teutopress
Art protest
Protesting a planned change to a German law on protecting cultural goods, Baselitz announced in July 2015 that he would withdraw his loans from German museums. According to the revision, entire museum collections would have been put under protection, barred from export outside Germany. The plans were later relaxed. Here, the cycle CDF includes linocuts and xylographs.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Schuldt
Fame has its price
Georg Baselitz is still one of the world's most significant contemporary artists. The current German art ranking Kunstkompass lists him in fourth place, a rank which has strongly influenced the price of his works. Last year, he sold his bronze sculpture Zero Dom (Zero Dome) for €950,000 ($1.2 million). Whether the sculpture has been turned on its head or not remains a topic of speculation.
Image: imago/Vibrant Pictures
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The exhibition Baselitz: Six Decades, revisits the works of renowned German artist Georg Baselitz, who turned 80 this year.
On show from June 21 through September 16 at the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., it is the first major Baselitz retrospective held in the US in 20 years.
It features over 100 works by the renowned German painter, graphic artist and sculptor, covering the various phases of Baselitz's six-decade career from the 1950s to this day.
It includes a celebrated work that was controversial in the 1960s, the painting The Naked Man (1962). Depicting a figure with a long erected penis, it was seized by German authorities and led to a court case.
Further highlights of the show are paintings from his 1965-1966 series Helden (Heroes) and Fracture, which reflected on the identity of the German after World War II.
Baselitz: Six Decades also displays the artist's upside-down paintings that made him internationally famous in the 1970s.
Works on paper and wood, as well as bronze sculptures are also part of the Hirshhorn exhibition. The works are on loan from major private and public collections in Europe and North America, and the show was co-organized with the Fondation Beyeler museum in Basel, where the exhibition was also shown previously this year.