Klee’s travels

E742085

Klee’s travels refers to the extensive journeys undertaken by Swiss-German artist Paul Klee, particularly to places like Tunisia and Italy, which profoundly shaped his use of color, form, and abstraction in works such as *Ad Parnassum*.

Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf artistic theme
biographical topic
associatedWithMovement Bauhaus NERFINISHED
Cubism NERFINISHED
Expressionism NERFINISHED
concerns Paul Klee’s movements between different countries and regions
documentedIn Paul Klee’s diaries
Paul Klee’s letters
hasMainFigure Paul Klee NERFINISHED
hasTheme dialogue with Italian art and architecture
encounter with Mediterranean light
integration of travel impressions into studio practice
response to North African color
transition from figurative to abstract representation
impactOn development of modern abstract painting
reception of Mediterranean and North African motifs in European modernism
includesDestination Bavaria NERFINISHED
Dessau NERFINISHED
Egypt NERFINISHED
France NERFINISHED
Germany NERFINISHED
Italy NERFINISHED
Munich NERFINISHED
North Africa NERFINISHED
Switzerland NERFINISHED
Tunisia NERFINISHED
Weimar NERFINISHED
influenced Paul Klee’s development of abstraction
Paul Klee’s pictorial structure
Paul Klee’s sense of light and atmosphere
Paul Klee’s use of color
Paul Klee’s use of form
influencedWork Ad Parnassum NERFINISHED
Klee’s Tunisian watercolors NERFINISHED
Klee’s abstract landscapes NERFINISHED
Klee’s architectural color compositions NERFINISHED
notableJourney Klee’s 1914 trip to Tunisia
Klee’s early 20th‑century trips to Italy
Klee’s travels associated with his Bauhaus period
refersTo the journeys undertaken by Swiss‑German artist Paul Klee
relatedTo Paul Klee’s color theory
Paul Klee’s compositional theory
Paul Klee’s teaching at the Bauhaus
studiedInField art history
biographical criticism
modernist studies
timePeriod early 20th century

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Ad Parnassum influencedBy Klee’s travels