FRANKFURT.- The Städel Museum announced a first-rate new acquisition for its collection. The magnum opus by the German Surrealist Richard Oelze (19001980) represents a significant enhancement to the Frankfurt museums Surrealist holdings. With the aid of generous support from the Cultural Foundation of the German Federal States and a contribution from the Kurt and Marga Möllgaard Foundation, the Städelscher Museums-Verein and the Städel Museum have jointly purchased the painting Archaic Fragment (1935) from a private collection. Long thought lost, the work is one of only three large-scale canvases from the artists most important creative period in Paris. The other two Expectation (193536) and Everyday Torments (1934) are now in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the Kunstsammlung NRW in Düsseldorf, respectively. Following careful conservation and restoration measures, Archaic Fragment is now on view in a specially installed cabinet exhibition in the galleries showcasing the Städel Museums modern art collection.
Richard Oelze painted only a handful of large-scale works in his life. All the more delighted are we that in cooperation with the Städelscher Museums-Verein and with generous support from the Cultural Foundation of the German Federal States we were able to seize the opportunity to obtain one of these masterworks of German Surrealism for our collection, commented Städel director Dr Philipp Demandt.
Archaic Fragment is a telling example of Richard Oelzes distinctive pictorial language and now, following its restoration, it shines in renewed splendour. It is an ideal enhancement to our Surrealist holdings, added Dr Alexander Eiling, the head of the Städel Museums collection of modern art, who is likewise very pleased about the new accession.
In his Paris years, Richard Oelze cultivated contacts with the chief exponents of the Surrealist movement among them André Breton, Max Ernst, Yves Tanguy and Salvador Dalí whose ideas and styles left distinct marks on his oeuvre. The artists of this group were primarily interested in themes that ran contrary to human logic their main concern was with dreams, visions and explorations of the subconscious. In Archaic Fragment, the fantastical motifs of the Surrealists combine with the precise painting style of New Objectivity, which Oelze had learned from his Dresden teachers Otto Dix and Richard Müller. And although this precision applies to even the smallest details, the depiction as a whole defies conclusive interpretation. A hybrid entity of plant, animal and human forms hovers as if alive before an imaginary landscape. It is a meeting of the familiar and the strange which, in keeping with Surrealist logic, unite to form an unsettling fabrication of the subconscious. Yet the artist also plays with erotic undertones and sparks the fears and desires that slumber in the human psyche like archaic fragments.
One of the core responsibilities of a vital museum is the ongoing expansion of its collection. I am all the happier that, through the purchase of Archaic Fragment, the Städelscher Museums-Verein the museums oldest and largest patron has once again had an opportunity to contribute to the further development of the Frankfurt collection on the highest level of quality, Sylvia von Metzler, the chairwoman of the Städelscher Museums-Verein, emphasized.
Richard Oelze is the most important German exponent of Surrealism apart from Max Ernst. Archaic Fragment, long given up for lost, is one of his rare large-scale masterpieces. The fact that, thanks to this acquisition, the Städels Surrealism collection has now been crowned with such an outstanding work gives me great pleasure, remarked Prof Dr Markus Hilgert, the secretary general of the Cultural Foundation of the German Federal States.
Restoration and conservation
The paintings original materials have survived in excellent condition. The careful restoration and conservation measures by Stephan Knobloch, the Städels head of painting restoration, focussed on removing patches from the back, closing small tears in the canvas and removing two yellowed layers of varnish as well as older retouching. As a result, the work has been returned almost to its original state. Not only has the original colour scheme been restored, but also the perspective of the overall pictorial composition as intended by the artist. A frame with a type of moulding used frequently in the 1920s and 30s was copied for the Oelze painting and furnished with a mounting likewise typical of that period.
Cabinet presentation
n the Städel collection, Archaic Fragment enhances another painting by Oelze Dangerous Desire (1936), acquired back in 1979. The two works are the highlights of a newly installed cabinet presentation in the museums modern art galleries. With the aid of three further examples from private holdings, the presentation offers a concentrated look at Richard Oelzes oeuvre and his independent and innovative position within the Surrealist movement. The presentation will be on view until 21 October 2018 in Cabinet 1.11.1 of the Städels garden wing.