Paul Reichle

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Paul Reichle (born March 14, 1900 in Stuttgart , † December 3, 1981 in Bietigheim-Bissingen ) was a German painter who belongs to the Stuttgart circle of avant-gardists .

Life

After completing an apprenticeship as a painter in Stuttgart, Paul Reichle studied at the Bauhaus Weimar from 1924 to 1925 under Josef Albers , Wassily Kandinsky , Paul Klee , László Moholy-Nagy and Oskar Schlemmer . In 1927 Willi Baumeister brought him to the studio of the Stuttgart Werkbund exhibition and then found him a job as a graphic artist and designer at Deutsche Linoleum-Werke (DLW), where he worked with interruptions a. a. worked through military service and imprisonment until 1965. During his military service he was stationed in Paris , where he again made contact with his former teacher Kandinsky and got to know the French avant-garde. From 1948 he turned consistently towards abstraction , with the French Nouvelle École de Paris being of central importance for his work. During his stays in Paris he used to associate with Serge Poliakoff and Raoul Ubac . After his retirement in 1965 he worked as a freelance artist until his death.

literature

  • Oliver Zybok, Wolfgang Thöner (Ed.): Bauhaus. The art of the student. Works from the collection of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation . (= Edition Bauhaus, Volume 37), Ostfildern 2013, p. 189
  • Paul Reichle. Retrospective . Bietigheim-Bissingen 1990

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Paul Reichle, In: kunstmarkt.com
  2. ^ Paul Reichle, The New Vision: Fundamentals of Bauhaus Design, Painting, Sculpture, and Architecture with Abstract of an Artist, by László Moholy-Nagy in the Google book search