KUNKEL FINE ART
Munich
Artists
- Otto Dix
- Dodo
- Lyonel Feininger
- Karl Hubbuch
- Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
- Max Klinger
- Gabriel von Max
- Adolph von Menzel
- Rudolf Schlichter
- Franz von Stuck
Works Available By
- Willi Baumeister
- Franz von Bayros
- Giovanni Boldini
- Eduard Büchler
- Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux
- Otto Dill
- Olaf Gulbransson
- Erich Heckel
- Ernst Heilemann
- Thomas Theodor Heine
- Adolf Hiremy-Hirschl
- Horst Janssen
- Alexej von Jawlensky
- Ferdinand Keller
- Paul Klee
- Heinrich Kley
- Karin Kneffel
- Georg Kolbe
- Wilhelm Friedrich Kuhnert
- Lotte Laserstein
- Sigmund Lipinsky
- Gilles Lorin
- Hans von Marées
- Ernst Matthes
- Margarete (Marg) Moll
- Richard Müller
- Adolf Münzer
- Lucien Neuquelman
- Emil Nolde
- Charles Johann Palmié
- Max Peiffer Watenphul
- Leo Putz
- Ferdinand Freih. von Reznicek
- Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
- Bernard Schultze
- Wilhelm Schulz
- Kurt Schwitters
- Johann Vierthaler
Kurt Schwitters
(German, 1887 – 1948)
Kurt Schwitters was a German artist involved in both Dadaism and Constructivism. Schwitters is best known for his Merz and Merzbau works, which incorporated collage, found objects, typography, and sound poetry to construct unique compositions. In these works, the artist used magazine clippings, waste material, and other recycled items in an attempt to express the rapidly changing world. “I could see no reason why used tram tickets, bits of driftwood, buttons and old junk from attics and rubbish heaps should not serve well as materials for paintings,” he observed. “It is possible to cry out using bits of old rubbish, and that's what I did, gluing and nailing them together.” Born on June 20, 1887 in Hanover, Germany, he...