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Collections

Bruno Paul
Ausstellung für Angewandte Kunst München 19061906

Not on view
Lithographic poster in marigold yellow and black with a circular vignette of a nude, olive-skinned figure holding a floral-patterned serpentine ribbon; German text above and below reads 'Ausstellung' and 'München 1906'
Color woodblock print or lithograph on yellow ground; within a bold black circle, a green-toned standing figure with floral headpiece and bead necklace holds a large patterned snake with teal and gold spots coiled around the body; flat graphic style with strong outlines; monogram in lower right corner.
Printed poster with bold black sans-serif type on amber-yellow background, divided into horizontal bands by black borders. German text reads 'Der Vereinigten Werkstätten für Kunst im Handwerk München 1906 Theatinerstrasse 18 / Für Angewandte Kunst.'
Verso of a work on paper showing aged cream surface with a circular institutional stamp at left, a pencil inscription reading 'DG 2004/3286,' and a handwritten signature in blue ink with a number.
Designer
Bruno Paul
Germany, 1874-1968
Printed by
Klein & Volbert
Germany, Munich
Title
Ausstellung für Angewandte Kunst München 1906
Date Made
1906
Medium
Lithograph
Dimensions
Sheet: 25 3/16 × 17 1/8 in. (64.01 × 43.5 cm)
Credit Line
Gift of Joel and Margaret Chen of J. F. Chen through the 2014 Decorative Arts and Design Acquisitions Committee (DA²)
Accession Number
M.2014.116.2
Classification
Prints
Collecting Area
Decorative Arts and Design
Curatorial Notes

At the turn of the last century, Munich reigned as Germany’s cultural capital, a magnet for artists and designers whose innovative work set the tone for the nation. The city’s Vereinigten Werkstätten für Kunst im Handwerk (United Workshops for Art in Handicraft) provided a uniquely German variant of the Arts and Crafts movement. Incorporated in 1898, the organization brought together designers, craftspeople, manufacturers, and merchants interested in promoting progressive design, making it available to a broad audience. They presented their work as complete interiors, emphasizing the Arts and Crafts ideal of the gesamtkunstwerk (total design unity). Unlike their British counterparts, however, the Werkstätten’s founders made little distinction between hand and machine-made work, choosing instead to prioritize a stripped-down, functionalist aesthetic.

Bruno Paul joined the Vereinigte Werkstätten within its first year and quickly became one of its most acclaimed talents. The prolific designer embodied the gesamtkunstwerk ideal, creating everything from furniture and interiors to metalwork and graphics. He designed posters for several of the workshop’s exhibitions. By 1904, he had shifted from the Jugendstil aesthetic of his earliest graphics towards more nationalistic and historical imagery, echoing larger trends in German design and culture.

This poster was owned by Julius Paul, one of the most prominent poster collectors in early twentieth-century Austria. Between 1895 and 1937, the Hungarian-born Jewish Viennese businessman amassed a collection of over 6,300 posters, which he left to his nephew Gaston upon his death in 1938. The following year, Gaston was forced to abandon the collection when Plhe fled Austria in the face of Nazi persecution. The collection was eventually sold to the Albertina Museum, where it remained until it was restituted to Paul’s heirs in 2008.

Staci Steinberger, Associate Curator, Decorative Arts and Design, 2021