Abstract painting “Fire at Full Moon” (1933) by Paul Klee, Limited Reproduction
Image “Fire at Full Moon” (1933)
“Fire at Full Moon” is one of Klee’s more systematic works. In keeping with his design principles developed at the Bauhaus, the effect of form, surface, and color becomes the subject matter.
Original: 1933, canvas, watercolor, waxed, on egg wash, on paste paint and on oil-primed canvas, 44.1 x 57 cm, Museum Folkwang, Essen.
Vibrant color reproduction mounted behind acrylic glass on an aluminum panel. Limited edition of 199 copies, numbered on the back. Dimensions: 64 x 84 cm (H/W). Includes hanging hardware.
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€ 368,00
His fellow artists called him simply "the Unique One": Paul Klee (1879-1940) shaped the understanding of modern art like almost no other. With his mosaic-like compositions, he created an entirely new style. Born in Bern in 1879, the German-Swiss Klee showed early promise as a dual talent: his drawing skills, as well as his violin playing, suggested both a musical and an artistic career. Klee chose art and went to the Munich Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied under Franz von Stuck, among others. However, it was less the academic studies than an extended study trip to Italy with fellow artists that helped him develop his own distinctive style. Subtle, symbolic representations full of wit and humor became his trademark. Mostly small formats, often just drawings, captivate the viewer.
- Abstract Expressionism
- Geometric abstraction
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Printer
Art print
- reproduction
- Limited edition
- Abstract
- Geometric
- Sky & Horizon
- Landscape
- Colorful / Multicolored
- Gray
- Black
- Siena
- Wall
- Indoor
- Solo placement
- Elegant
- Mid-Century
- Modern



