The Invention of the 20th Century

Carl Einstein and the Avant-garde

Held on12 nov 2008to16 feb 2009
Nouvel Building, Floor 1

His intellectual work, rediscovered in recent decades, is being honoured at the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía in the first international exhibition that provides a visual overview of Einstein’s work, a key figure in the visual arts, but also of literature, theatre, film and political action. The purpose of the exhibition The Invention of the 20th Century. Carl Einstein and the Avant-garde is to offer a visual overview of Einstein’s intellectual work. For this, pieces have been collected by the most important artists of the last century who knew Einstein, with whom he worked and/or on whose careers he contemplated and wrote about. The one hundred and twenty pieces bring together, among others, Georges Braque, Salvador Dalí, George Grosz, Fernand Léger, Joan Miró, Pablo Picasso, Henri Rousseau, Paul Klee, Otto Dix, Hans Arp and Paul Klee.

The exhibition is organised into sections on African art -pieces that are reproduced in his famous 'Negerplastik' from 1915- Dadaism, and Verismo, Cubism, Surrealism and on the role of the arts during the Spanish Civil War, as Einstein was involved in the conflict as a war technician in 1936.

The pieces are accompanied by documentary material about his art writings, most notably El arte del siglo XX (1926), a work that made him one of the leading historians of the avant-garde, and the magazine Documents (1929-30), about the surrealist movement. As a result the exhibition becomes a retrospective of the history of art from that century through the eyes of the central figure of thought.

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Artists

Anónimos, Max Beckmann, Georges Braque, Salvador Dalí, Otto Dix, Carl Einstein, Benno Elkan, Alberto Giacometti, Juan Gris (José Victoriano González Pérez), Paul Klee, Fernand Léger, Joan Miró, Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso (Pablo Ruiz Picasso), Henri Rousseau, Gaston-Louis Roux, Rudolf Schlichter
Curator
Uwe Fleckener

Organised by

Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía