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Jean Arp: Poetry of Forms review - subversive pioneer honoured in Holland | reviews, news & interviews

Jean Arp: Poetry of Forms review - subversive pioneer honoured in Holland

Jean Arp: Poetry of Forms review - subversive pioneer honoured in Holland

A celebratory retrospective in Otterlo is heading for Margate

The Eggboard, 1922Photo: Marjon Gemmeke/Kröller-Müller Museum

This summer the wonderful Kröller-Möller museum in Otterlo hosts the first major Dutch retrospective of the works of Hans (Jean) Arp since 1960 – an exhibition that will travel in a marginally smaller version to Margate’s Turner Contemporary later this year.

The exhibition sits slightly tangentially within a celebratory year marking 100 years of Dutch design, from the founding in 1917 of De Stijl – an artist magazine and school of thought/movement founded in 1917 by Theo van Doesburg, and whose most famous member is Piet Mondrian – to the present day.

In this context, the German-French Arp emerges as a playful and delightfully disruptive figure, who collaborated with some of the leading avant-garde figures of his era, moving through Dada (as a founder member), Abstraction and Surrealism (working with both poets and artists) to pioneer his own "concrete art", and whose extensive close network included De Stijl’s Theo van Doesburg (pictured below: Maquette of the Arbette amusement centre in Strasbourg, which Arp, his wife, and Theo Van Doesburg collaborated on). Arp’s most enduring collaboration was with his first wife and fellow artist Sophie Taeuber, who "through the example of her clear work and her clear life, showed me the right path, the road to beauty", and who is also the inspiration behind much of his creative experimentation (she died tragically in 1943 of carbon monoxide poisoning).Theo van Doesburg, A maquette of the redesigned interior of the Arbette  amusement centre in Strasbourg, which Arp, his wife, and Theo Van Doesburg collaborated on. Photo: Cary Markerink/ Kröller-Müller MuseumIf you travel to Otterlo to see Arp, prior to his English seaside outing this autumn, you will find a special section of the exhibition (only in Otterlo) that reconstructs the interior of the Aubette amusement centre in Strasbourg that Sophie Taeuber, Arp and Van Doesburg designed together, together with a blow-up photo of Arp – with a gentle, mischievous intelligence playing around his features – and his wife. You will also be able to view Arp’s collages, reliefs, sculptures, prints, poetry, writings and publications in the context of the Kröller Möller’s world-renowned sculpture garden, where Arp’s Cloud Shepherd, 1953 (pictured below left), has long been one of its most popular residents. This monumental bronze – marking a triumphant new chapter in his late career – shows what a master Arp was of both abstraction and allusion. The sculpture’s bulging organic form might suggest a shepherd with its crook or the homely gait of a sheep, but it is also entirely itself with its own fundamental essence. At the same time it borrows from the curves and marvels of nature, refracting light and reflecting grass, lake and sky.

Cloud shepherd, 1953, photo: Marjon Gemmeke/Kröller-Müller MuseumArp described art as "a fruit that grows in man, like a fruit on a plant, or a child in its mother’s womb". His work delights in organic curves and abstract shapes, surrealist humour, deep humanity, creative chance and play – whether in written or visual form. The exhibition focuses on the years 1920-35, when Arp set out to create a new relationship between the human, object and nature and when his visual and textual practices co-exist and interplay. His belief that art should never just imitate the natural world but follow its own inherent nature, led to him developing independent biomorphic forms that have their own interior life. Thus we see him progress from paper cut-outs and collage (embracing chance and randomness) through wood reliefs and freestanding flat sculpture (his "stabiles") to his "concretions" (embodiments). The latter present themselves to us as if they are new visual entities. Their smooth free-flowing shapes are born of the same impulses that give rise to clouds, hills, human body parts, as opposed to the machines and institutions that Arp regarded as the engines of war (pictured below: Sculpture to be Lost in the Forest, 1932).

In this context, the decision of the exhibition’s designers to encase Arp’s sculptures in large glass vitrines on blocky plinths seems incomprehensible (even though in the first room the blocks are arranged in a sinuous curve). The wall works, too – from the collages and wood reliefs to the exuberant prints – have been framed within large rectangular mounts (the same brown tone as the plinths) giving them a monolithic uniformity that belies Arp’s fluid approach. The rectangular "settings" may mirror some of the few rectilinear compositions or symmetrical woodcuts on display, such as the early Duo-collage of 1918 (made with his wife), but they do the majority of Arp’s works no favours. The catalogue for the show quotes the avant-garde poet Tristan Tzara, whose views are attributed to Arp: "In the same sense as the picture frame prevents direct and immediate emotion, the plinth of the sculpture too is a convention. Realities, creations have neither ends nor feet but are complete in their unity." Unfortunately, this design – which is no doubt intended to provide a cohesive solution to the difficulties of exhibiting the sheer variety of media Arp worked in – will travel with the show.Sculpture to be Lost in the Forest, 1932, photo: Marjon Gemmeke/Kröller-Müller MuseumArp’s work, however, somehow survives this unsympathetic environment. Arp wanted his art to be seen in the context of the workings of nature. His creativity, like the waves of the sea or a body in motion, cannot be confined: it constantly morphs, plays and resolves itself into something that is lively, mysterious, and often inordinately satisfying.

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