1958 After Paul Klee "Still Life", First English Edition Lithograph Of The Artist's Last Work

$234

Chairish

A striking vintage First Edition offset lithograph print after Still Life (1940) by Paul Klee. Comes from a rare First Limited Edition folio published in London in 1958. Signed in the print. Printed on one side. Hand tipped-in on a board of heavy paper. Information regarding the original artwork is printed under the plate. Copy on the back of the board is related to another piece in the folio. Detailed. Colors are brilliant. Excellent condition - never framed. Overall 10.45"W x 14.10"H Image 7"W x 8.5"H Klee's last work, which he didn't not sign or caption. A curious requiem which he composed for himself, just as Mozart did. Apparently it represents a domestic scene, with a table on which a green (mint) coffee-pot and pale violet sculpture are placed. Flowers are scattered over the orange cloth; they look like letters of an alphabet. At the upper left there is a red (coral) tabletop with vases, one of which has an arm-like appendage and red (salmon) flowers. The background is of the deepest black (ebony), with a moon as yellow as the yolk of an egg. All of a sudden the picture seems sinister. The intimacy of a still life seems to have changed. The black is the night, and the moon does not illuminate it. The flowers on the table are transformed into artificial flowers like those thrown into graves. But there is a clue to the riddle - a white card at the lower left, near the frame. On the card we see a winged figure held back by hands clenched into fists - probably an image of Jacob wrestling with angel. Jacob was one of the elect; thus Klee's last work offers us a parable of hope fr life beyond death.

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