von konstruktiver klarheit
max bill und seine zeit 1940–1952

5 October – 18 November 2023

Zurich, Bahnhofstrasse

In conjunction with the release of the second volume of Angela Thomas’ biography on Max Bill, ‘von konstruktiver klarheit. max bill und seine zeit 1940–1952,’ Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Bahnhofstrasse will present a Book Lab from 5 October to 18 November.

About

Alongside various publications by and about Max Bill, there will be a selection of works by the artist on display, spanning from the 1940s to 1950s, including paintings and sculptures as well as around ten drawings, some of which are being exhibited for the first time. Max Bill (1908–1994) was one of the most versatile artists of the 20th Century, working as a designer, painter, sculptor, architect, graphic designer, furniture designer, typographer, publicist, curator, mediator, lecturer and politician. He is considered a pioneering figure and the most influential representative of concrete art. He significantly reinterpreted the genre—once defined by Theo van Doesburg—and raised its international profile thanks to his extensive artistic network and teaching activities.

RELATED EVENTS

Thursday 5 October, 6 – 8 pm
Book Launch and Book Lab Opening
With author Angela Thomas
Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Bahnhofstrasse

Tuesday 24 October, 7 pm
Conversation and Book Signing
With author Angela Thomas and historian Prof. Ita Heinze-Greenberg
Foyer Haefner at Chipperfield-Bau, Kunsthaus Zürich

Wednesday 1 November, 5.30 pm
Screening of ‘Max Bill—das absolute Augenmass’
With director Erich Schmid and author Angela Thomas
Arthouse Piccadilly Cinema, Zurich

Thursday 2 November, 5 pm
Conversation and Book Signing
With author Angela Thomas and curator Fabienne Eggelhöfer
Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern

In October 2023, ‘von konstruktiver klarheit. max bill und seine zeit 1940–1952’ will be the main focus of Hauser & Wirth Publishers’ presentation at the Frankfurt Book Fair. This is the first time that the publishing house will take part in the fair as part of the joint booth of the Swiss Booksellers and Publishers Association (SBVV).

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Angela Thomas was the co-founder and editor of ‘kassandra,’ the first German-language feminist magazine for the visual arts (Berlin and Zurich, 1977/78). She met Max Bill in 1974 and married him in 1991. For twenty years she kept notes on their shared conversations, experiences and travels, as well as the exhibitions they curated together. After Bill’s death, she founded the max bill georges vantongerloo foundation, which shestill chairs as president. In 1998, Angela Thomas married the director Erich Schmid; they live together in Bill’s house and studio in Zumikon near Zurich and collaborated on the film ‘Max Bill—das absolute Augenmass’ (2008).

Image: Installation view, ‘von konstruktiver klarheit. max bill und seine zeit 1940–1952,’ Hauser & Wirth Zurich, Bahnhofstrasse, 2023 © 2023, Prolitteris, Zürich. Collection of Angela Thomas, Zumikon. Photo: Jon Etter

Installation views

About the Artist

Max Bill was a great Swiss polymath: an artist, architect, industrial designer, graphic designer, and teacher. He attended the Bauhaus where he was taught by Josef Albers, László Moholy-Nagy, Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Oskar Schlemmer. Bill remained closely associated with the Bauhaus school and was a key figure in developing and propagating its principles, especially through his professorship at the Kunstgewerbeschule Zürich and as a founder of the Ulm School of Design. Through his pursuit of a new visual language that could be understood by the senses alone, Bill defined the conventions of Swiss design for decades to come. His influence spread even as far as South America, where he was a catalyst for the Concrete Art movement.

Bill was born in Winterthur, Switzerland in 1908. Originally studying as a silversmith’s apprentice, he became fascinated with modern architecture upon encountering Le Corbusier’s L’Esprit Nouveau at the Paris Exposition des Arts Décoratifs in 1925. After finding Bauhaus materials in a bookshop in Zurich, Bill applied and was accepted to the Bauhaus school in Dessau, studying under the guidance of such teachers as Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee from 1927 to 1928. The tenets of the Bauhaus, including a modern, scientific approach to colour and Constructivist form, would inform his interdisciplinary work in art, architecture, and design for the rest of Bill’s life.

After leaving the Bauhaus, Bill moved to Zurich and began experimenting with and expanding the margins of Constructivism. He would eventually popularize the term Concrete Art (first coined by Theo van Doesburg) to further define his fascination with mathematical and geometric foundations utilized in the creation of objects—whether sculptures, paintings, or functional objects—that he considered the physical manifestations of rationalism. Bill never disregarded the social implications of the work he made; against the backdrop of Nazi Germany and World War II, Bill insisted, ‘if you design something for the public, you must assume social responsibility.’ Bill was a key member in a number of artist groups, including the Allianz group in Zurich and Abstraction-Création in Paris.

Bill executed many public sculptures in Europe and his work was exhibited extensively in galleries and museums during his lifetime, including a retrospective at the Kunsthaus Zürich in 1968 – 69. His first exhibition in the United States was presented at the Staempfli Gallery in New York City in 1963; U.S. solo exhibitions were presented at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1974. In 1993, he received the Praemium Imperiale for sculpture.

Bill is credited with having been helped to inspire Brazil’s the Concrete Art movement with his 1951 retrospective at the São Paulo Museum of Modern Art.

The Max Bill Georges Vantongerloo Stiftung was established by Bill’s widow, the independent curator and scholar Dr. Angela Thomas Schmid, to represent the part of these two artists’ estates entrusted to her care. Despite maintaining entirely distinct artistic practices, artists Max Bill and Georges Vantongerloo were bound together in their desire to forge new developments in the field of twentieth-century abstraction, and by their lifelong friendship. Their close relationship and an extended personal written correspondence—which unfolded over the course of more than three decades—united their independent artistic and intellectual endeavours, and helped each to push the boundaries of his work to the fullest. The progress of this extraordinary creative exchange mirrors the artistic and philosophical breakthroughs that defined the last century.

Current Exhibitions