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Mark Tobey

Khmer Skulpturen and Mark Tobey paintings

View into the exhibition - Closeness of Distance
-
Khmer sculptures and Mark Tobey paintings

left:
Mark Tobey
White Flames   1970
tempera on hand-made paper
60 x 49 cm
signed and dated

right:
Head of Buddha
Dvaravati period
c. 7-8th century
schist with traces of lacquer
height 37 cm

Meadow I   ca. 1968

Mark Tobey
Meadow I   c. 1968
tempera on paper
23 x 14 cm
signed

Space Tunnel   1965

Mark Tobey
Space Tunnel   1965
tempera on paper
12,5 x 17 cm
signed and dated

Mark Tobey
American Landscape  1968
tempera on abrasive paper
23 x 17,2 cm
signed

Mark Tobey
Glowing Earth, 1969
Tempera on Ingres paper
61 x 50 cm
signed

Mark Tobey
Night Celebration II   1971
tempera on black light cardboard
33 x 46,5 cm
signed and dated

Calligraphy   ca. 1968

Mark Tobey
Calligraphy   c. 1968
tempera on Ingres paper
35,5 x 26 cm
signed

Mark Tobey
Tropical Garden  1969
tempera on Ingres paper
60,5 x 52 cm
signed

Mark Tobey
Untitled  1972
tempera on paper
17 x 11,5 cm
signed and dated

Tobey in Basel 1972 -

The Committee Mark Tobey (CMT) promotes the work of the artist in initiating exhibitions in art institutions and publications about life and work. CMT supports projects by providing them with informations and provenances of works..

Committee members:

Prof. Dr. Kosme de Barañano
Matthias Bärmann
Dr. Heiner Hachmeister

Bilbao, Spain
Laupheim, Germany
Münster, Germany  

By “clicking” on this area you get directly to the CMT - Homepage.

Literature

CLOSENESS OF DISTANCE   -   Khmer Skulpturen und Mark Tobey Bilder

Heiner Hachmeister, Emil Mirzakhanian (ed.)
CLOSENESS OF DISTANCE    -   Khmer sculptures and Mark Tobey paintings

texts german/english by Donald M. Stadtner, Matthias Bärmann, Erich Franz
44 illustrations in colour print, biography, bibliography, totally 122 pages
31 x 24 cm, hardcover, silk bound, edition of 400 ex., Mailand 1998/99
price    € 60.-

For the first time this catalogue book combines the sacred figurative stone sculptures of the Khmer from the 7th to the 13th century with the abstract paintings of the american artist Mark Tobey from the fifties up to the seventies of the 20th century. Although being totally different concerning style and authentic meaning, these works of art seem to be related on the level of meditation and interpretation of space.
The Khmer sculptures of highest quality belonged to old european collections and are now published for the first time.
The sculptures are chronologically classified and presented in their artistic and religious meaning.
 

MARK TOBEY   -   Werke / Oeuvres  1945-1975

Heiner Hachmeister (ed.)
MARK TOBEY   -   Werke / Oeuvres  1945-1975

text german/french by Castor Seibel
with poems by Mark Tobey
57 illustrations in colour print, biography, bibliography, totally 112 pages
27 x 21 cm, hardcover, edition of 1.000 ex., 1991
ISBN  3-88829-090-2
price     € 42.50

This catalogue presents a general idea of the tempera paintings and prints of Mark Tobey (1890-1976), which he did during his important years between 1945 and 1975.
His inventions of  the "all over painting" and the "white writing" led Tobey to be the father of the modern american painting.
His work, which had a great influence on his contemporaries and later generations of artists, has not lost anything of its importance because of its timelessness.
Most of the works reproduced in this book are published for the first time.
 

Mark Tobey - Light Space

Heiner Hachmeister (Ed.)
MARK  TOBEY – Light Space
New edition in English language

Texts by Wesley Wehr, Matthias Bärmann, Kosme de Barañano, Heiner Hachmeister
57 illustrations in color, biography with extensive and actual exhibition index and extensive bibliography
totally 152 pages. format  31 x 24 cm.
hardcover in color, half-linen, Edition 2.000 ex.
Hachmeister Verlag Münster December 2004

HACHMEISTER VERLAG, Klosterstr. 12, 48143  Muenster, Germany
Tel  +49-251-51210  Fax  +49-251-57217  
hachmeister.galerie@t-online.de
Price   €  64,00 / US $  83.00


When we consider Mark Tobey's many journeys to various continents and his active interest in things other than painting, such as music, literature, religion, and philosophy, then it becomes clear that Tobey was one of the few of his generation of American artistswho actually opened a door to still broader experiences. His work shows an important influence on European and American painting. Morris Graves, working near Seattle, used Tobey’s white writing to add a mystic level to his animalistic figures. Italians Tancredi and Mario Deluigi openly yet superficially imitated Tobey. In the degree of abstraction, the compositional schemes, and the all-over notion of Tobey’s paintings, Jackson Pollock recognized an opportunity to move beyond the discourse surrounding the Surrealists who had emigrated from Europe to North America — a step that would lead him to his action paintings. Without the impulse provided by Tobey’s moving focus and all-over concept, works by Richard Pousette-Dart and Lee Krasner, and the early works of Sam Francis and Piero Dorazio would have been inconceivable.

The description of one of Tobey's short stays in New York in 1956, written by his longtime friend, Wesley Wehr, in With Mark Tobey in New York provides a lively introduction to Tobey’s inexhaustible thirst for knowledge and visual experience, his wide network of friendships, and at the same time, a few remarkable insights into his work and works by other artists of his time, such as Piet Mondrian. In his text, Between Worlds, Matthias Bärmann uses the striking, multifaceted term ”nomadic pattern” to describe the actions and deeds of Mark Tobey, determines the position of Tobey's work in the American modern art, especially during the Cold Culture War, and  explains the artistic relationship between Tobey and Pollock. In his text, Ductus, Stroke and Graphics in Tobey's Work, Kosme de Barañano demonstrates that, as a symbol for multifacetedness, Tobey’s writing was not limited to fine, white structures, but that the many different kinds of phenomena each have their own correspondent in the many different types of writing and color used in painting. In Some notes on some works by Mark Tobey  Heiner Hachmeister explains different aggregate states of related works and their different tenors, comments Tobey's late work and debates his paintings on Styrofoam.

The illustrations in color concentrate only on Tobey's abstract work. Beginning with the firstly illustrated 1944 white writing tempera Written Stone, the book presents further masterpieces from the 40ies and 50ies like Promenaders (1945), Central (1949) or New Crescent from 1953 and Meditative Series VIII (1954). Important paintings from the 60ies like one of Tobey's rare oil paintings Untitled (1965), the series of Night Celebrations from 1969 – 71 or the large sized Ecstasy of Growth(1967) show the high-aged artist's powerful exposition of his calligraphic painting. Full-paged illustrations of details from early and late works allow to study Tobey's virtuosity which let painting become light and space.