Showing posts with label Hilma af Klint. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hilma af Klint. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2020

Beyond the Visible: Hilma af Klint


Hilma af Klint was sort of like the Emily Dickinson of abstract painting, except she was the first artist to ever do it. Her first abstract paintings erupted into the world fully formed, predating Kandinsky’s more hesitant experiments by several years. Cineastes will also know her as the artist who interests Kristen Stewart in Personal Shopper. Her art is boldly colorful, but the presentation is a bit sedate throughout Halina Dryschka’s documentary profile, Beyond the Visible: Hilma af Klint, which opens “virtually” this Friday.

Dryschka and her on-screen experts do a nice job establishing af Klint’s influences, science and spiritualism, as well as explaining why that was not as contradictory as it sounds today. Of course, the latter is what made the artist such a perfect fit for Personal Shopper. At times, she claimed her paintings just flowed through her, much like the automatic writing of Chico Xavier. She was even a member of a séance circle called “The Five,” so eventually someone is bound to produce a straight-up Hilma af Klint horror movie (can’t wait). However, her personal life was quiet to the point of being cloistered, but at least she apparently had one great, relatively reciprocal love of her life.

Visible scores a real coup uncovering a hitherto unknown 1928 exhibition of af Klint’s abstract paintings in London, when the conventional wisdom held that only a handful of her early academic paintings received any kind of public showing. On the other hand, all the talking heads wildly overstate their arguments regarding the perniciousness of the art-world’s so-called “patriarchy” and the crass commercialism of the art market. Yes, there are many more examples of men who found fame in the art world than women, but somehow Georgia O’Keeffe and Mary Cassatt still eclipsed nearly all of their colleagues.