Description

Good overall condition, see photo. Signed on the back with the monogram. K.K This artwork comes from a part of the studio fund that was in a Drawing box, see attached photo; other works are available in my shop from abstractions of the 1930s and drawings from the Art Brut period after the 1950s. ⸻ ⸻ Biography of Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss (1892 – after 1966) Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss, born in 1892, is a Franco-German artist whose work spans several major movements in modern art: abstraction, engaged art, and a freer vein, close to Art Brut, in the last decades of her life. She is also known for her artistic and personal collaboration with Otto Freundlich, a major figure in spiritual abstraction. ⸻ ? Training and early years Little is known about her initial training, but she was active in Paris from the 1920s. She frequented avant-garde circles, where she met Otto Freundlich, a sculptor and theorist of abstraction of German origin, with whom she shared her life and studio. She became an essential collaborator of Freundlich, participating in his work and sharing his ideas on the universality of art and the spirituality of forms. ⸻ ? Abstract period (1920s-1930s) In the 1930s, Kosnick-Kloss developed a rhythmic geometric abstraction, influenced by constructivism, orphism (from Robert and Sonia Delaunay), and color theories. She produced gouaches and drawings where the circle and spiral dominate, evoking cosmic harmony. She was in contact with Sonia Delaunay, with whom she shared a colorist sensitivity and an interest in integrating art into daily life (clothing, textiles, objects). Although less known, Kosnick-Kloss participated in this female ecosystem of abstraction, often eclipsed by official history. ⸻ ? Political engagement and exile With the rise of Nazism, Kosnick-Kloss and Freundlich went into exile in southern France. Otto Freundlich, of Jewish origin and considered by the Nazis as a representative of "degenerate art," was arrested in 1943 and deported to Majdanek, where he was murdered. Jeanne survived the war and preserved the legacy of their joint work. Her post-war work, freer and more intuitive, seems marked by this trauma. ⸻ ? Art Brut / free expression period (1950s-1960s) In the 1950s-60s, Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss adopted a more spontaneous plastic writing, marked by irregular forms, primitive figures, and personal symbols. This vein relates her to Art Brut or a form of naive expressionism, in line with Dubuffet. She pursued a discreet but coherent body of work, asserting a profoundly personal aesthetic, on the margins of dominant currents. ⸻ Legacy and recognition Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss remains today a little-known but significant figure of European abstraction. Her work is inseparable from that of Otto Freundlich, of whom she was the artistic partner and the guardian of memory after the war. She continues to be rediscovered through exhibitions dedicated to Freundlich or female abstraction. Type: Pastel Style: 1920 Genre: Art brut, Outsider art Characteristics: On Paper Theme: Animals
Réf  :   #337906

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Pastel on Paper 1927 Jeanne Kosnick Kloss Art Brut Old Portrait

0 11  English  Français
Last update : 04/07/2025
1 650
31500 Toulouse
Free
22.00 €
 
 


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Description

Good overall condition, see photo. Signed on the back with the monogram. K.K This artwork comes from a part of the studio fund that was in a Drawing box, see attached photo; other works are available in my shop from abstractions of the 1930s and drawings from the Art Brut period after the 1950s. ⸻ ⸻ Biography of Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss (1892 – after 1966) Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss, born in 1892, is a Franco-German artist whose work spans several major movements in modern art: abstraction, engaged art, and a freer vein, close to Art Brut, in the last decades of her life. She is also known for her artistic and personal collaboration with Otto Freundlich, a major figure in spiritual abstraction. ⸻ ? Training and early years Little is known about her initial training, but she was active in Paris from the 1920s. She frequented avant-garde circles, where she met Otto Freundlich, a sculptor and theorist of abstraction of German origin, with whom she shared her life and studio. She became an essential collaborator of Freundlich, participating in his work and sharing his ideas on the universality of art and the spirituality of forms. ⸻ ? Abstract period (1920s-1930s) In the 1930s, Kosnick-Kloss developed a rhythmic geometric abstraction, influenced by constructivism, orphism (from Robert and Sonia Delaunay), and color theories. She produced gouaches and drawings where the circle and spiral dominate, evoking cosmic harmony. She was in contact with Sonia Delaunay, with whom she shared a colorist sensitivity and an interest in integrating art into daily life (clothing, textiles, objects). Although less known, Kosnick-Kloss participated in this female ecosystem of abstraction, often eclipsed by official history. ⸻ ? Political engagement and exile With the rise of Nazism, Kosnick-Kloss and Freundlich went into exile in southern France. Otto Freundlich, of Jewish origin and considered by the Nazis as a representative of "degenerate art," was arrested in 1943 and deported to Majdanek, where he was murdered. Jeanne survived the war and preserved the legacy of their joint work. Her post-war work, freer and more intuitive, seems marked by this trauma. ⸻ ? Art Brut / free expression period (1950s-1960s) In the 1950s-60s, Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss adopted a more spontaneous plastic writing, marked by irregular forms, primitive figures, and personal symbols. This vein relates her to Art Brut or a form of naive expressionism, in line with Dubuffet. She pursued a discreet but coherent body of work, asserting a profoundly personal aesthetic, on the margins of dominant currents. ⸻ Legacy and recognition Jeanne Kosnick-Kloss remains today a little-known but significant figure of European abstraction. Her work is inseparable from that of Otto Freundlich, of whom she was the artistic partner and the guardian of memory after the war. She continues to be rediscovered through exhibitions dedicated to Freundlich or female abstraction. Type: Pastel Style: 1920 Genre: Art brut, Outsider art Characteristics: On Paper Theme: Animals
Réf  :   #337906

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