VIENNA.- For Georg Eisler, being an artist meant being an eye-witness to the times. He tenaciously traced and engaged with life, capturing both carefree and dramatic moments in his images. We encounter passengers in a tram and dancers in a club on the one hand, politically motivated violence in Belfast or Soweto on the other. Although his subjects were contemporary, stylistically he never moved toward the avant-garde, and over the decades he remained true to a figurative, realistic style of painting. This IN-SIGHT exhibition at the
Upper Belvedere showcases a critical mind and an astute observer, an artist whose pictures remain as topical as ever today.
CEO Stella Rollig: Georg Eislers subjects connect with current issues: from the Me Too and the Black Lives Matter movements, to conflicts at demonstrations, such as the Covid-19 protests, or political crises. Presenting Eislers work thus means exploring his and our own reality, and recognizing, with horror, that history repeats itself.
To make visible the intervening spaces, the perspectival, emotional, and psychological spaces between figure and figure, is how Georg Eisler described his artistic approach in 1963. Always with a sketchbook at the ready, Eisler captured life where he saw it and scenes that moved him and made him think. He generally depicted his subjects in loose and lively brushwork, avoiding unnecessary details and concentrating on the essentials. He thus created a visual style that holds a lasting fascination to this day.
The exhibition places a focus on the sometimes controversial themes in his art. These bear witness to the painters critical engagement with political and social issues. Eisler wanted his images to stir people and some of his paintings certainly express his criticism of the establishment. He had himself experienced political sanctions in his youthleaving a deep impression that enduringly characterized his work. The son of the composer Hanns Eisler and the singer Charlotte Eisler, both members of the communist party, he had frequently encountered violent conflicts in the period before the Second World War. Until his return to Vienna, he had spent his youth in the then Soviet Union (Moscow) and Czechoslovakia (Prague), and finally in exile in England (Manchester, London).
Humanity is at the core of Georg Eislers work: a critical engagement with human character and relationships within the social fabric underpinned his choice of subject matter. Eisler sensitively explored identities and mentalities: the layers of personality, the polarity of individual and society, of the single person and the mass.
Curator Kerstin Jesse: In Eislers multifaceted oeuvre, I am particularly captivated by the socio-critical subjects from the 1960s onward. At first glance it seems you can quickly grasp these scenes. On closer scrutiny, however, a multitude of personal and social interactions come to light, which Eisler captured in a manner that is both incisive and sensitive. The dense atmosphere and the thought-provoking content make his images extremely compelling.
Georg Eisler was always a figurative artist. He never absorbed post-1945 contemporary trends, such as abstraction, Surrealism, Art Informel, Pop Art, or Neo-Expressionism. As an artist he was preoccupied with translating the visible into his own pictorial language using loose brushwork, and this posed a constant challenge. This is reflected in his personal writings dating from 1962 to 1997. They provided an important source for this IN-SIGHT exhibition and offer an unfiltered glimpse of the artists thoughts and concerns.
After Georg Eislers death in 1998, Alice Eisler took over her husbands artistic estate. In 2013, the estate was transferred to the Georg and Alice Eisler Fund for Artists and Composers, which is still exploring and managing his extensive oeuvre. Since 2019, the Belvedere has been collaborating with the Fund to compile a catalogue raisonné of the artists work.
In the context of the exhibition, the Belvedere received a generous donation of fourteen Georg Eisler paintings from the Fund. The large-scale works explore themes that were previously not represented in the Belvederes collection of Eislers work and thus close an important gap.