Rudolf Jahns

How are you (No. III/24), 1958

Collage
14,9 × 12 cm
Signed, dated and titled
Provenance:
Estate of Rudolf Jahns
Literature:
Ulrich Krempel, Barbara Roselieb-Jahns, Rudolf Jahns: Werkverzeichnis 1917-1981, Ostfildern-Ruit 2003, S. 316, Nr. 717.
Rudolf Jahns: Collagen, Ausst.-Kat. Kunstsammlungen Chemnitz, Chemnitz 2015, S.17 (Abb.), S. 75.
Blau: Von farblichen Akzenten zur Monochromie V, Ausst.-Kat. Galerie Koch, Hannover 2023, S. 42f.

About the artist

Rudolf Jahns was born in Wolfenbüttel on 13 March 1896. He grew up in Braunschweig from 1902, where he graduated from high school in 1915. As a pupil, Jahns was already a member of the school orchestra as a flautist. After serving as a medic in the First World War (until March 1919), he returned to Braunschweig. At his father's insistence, Jahns worked at customs, but continued to paint and draw as a self-taught artist. He rents a studio outside his parents' home. Jahns begins to study the contemporary European avant-garde, in particular the works of Lyonel Feininger, the cubist works of Pablo Picasso and George Braque, the abstract compositions of Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee. He created his first drawings, tempera paintings and watercolours with a constructive design of the surface. In 1920, Jahns was transferred to Holzminden as a tax official. Here he felt isolated and fled into the experience of nature, which, alongside his love of music, remained important for his compositions despite his geometric-abstract formal language. Jahns sought a creative approach to the forms and colours found in nature, which he believed was a prerequisite for any artistic creation in order to form "living things" and not "rigid matter" (1924). Jahns' engagement with nature, as well as the musical foundation of his compositions, link him to Paul Klee. Jahns studied classical music intensively and played the piano as well as the flute. In 1924, Jahns was able to exhibit his works for the first time in the Berlin gallery "Der Sturm". Here he also saw the works of the Hanoverian artist Kurt Schwitters. The two met in person on 24 February 1927. Jahns had arranged a so-called "Merz" evening for the Hanoverian in his Holzminden studio. On this occasion, Schwitters saw works by Jahns for the first time and invited him that same evening to take part in two planned exhibitions of the "International Association of Expressionists, Futurists, Cubists and Constructivists" ("Die Abstrakten") and to found his own local group of this artists' association in Hanover, the "abstrakten hannover". Founded on 12 March 1927 in Schwitters' flat in Hanover, the group included Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart, Carl Buchheister, Hans Nitzschke and later Cesar Domela alongside Schwitters and Jahns. The ban on abstract painting by the National Socialists and the confiscation of his oil painting "Abstract Composition" from the Provinzialmuseum Hannover drove Jahns into artistic emigration and towards figurative depictions of people and landscapes. After 1945, Jahns resumed his abstract-constructive work, initially hesitantly, then with renewed intensity, interweaving the experience of nature, landscape, music and architecture into his art. The early death of his wife Renate (1958) and his son (1960) plunged the artist into a creative crisis, which he overcame in the first half of the 1960s. His late work now emerges, characterised by innovation and quality. Jahns is recognised through solo exhibitions in art associations and museums. In 1976, the Westphalian State Museum for Art and Culture organised a solo exhibition of the artist's work, as did the Sprengel Museum in Hanover and the Wilhelm Hack Museum in Ludwigshafen in 1981. In 1982, Jahns was awarded the Federal Cross of Merit 1st Class and honorary citizenship of the town of Holzminden. After Jahn's death, the Rudolf Jahns Foundation was established in 1994. Since then, the Sprengel Museum in Hanover has regularly organised solo exhibitions of the artist's work.
Rudolf Jahns was one of the early representatives of constructivist art in Germany. From 1919 onwards, he explored the constructive design of the surface and in 1927, together with Kurt Schwitters, Friedrich Vordemberge-Gildewart, Carl Buchheister and Hans Nitzschke, he was one of the founding members of the group "die abstrakten hannover". During the period of the National Socialist cultural dictatorship, Jahns withdrew into "inner emigration" and only continued his abstract-constructivist work after 1945. In 1958, Jahns returned to the collage technique he had already tried out in 1923/24. The result is a series of collages that show the influence of Kurt Schwitters, who died in 1948 and was a friend of Jahns. Jahns used papers of various origins and types as material, some printed with writing, rarely with illustrations, whereby single-colour papers without typographical elements predominated. In "Wie bist Du (No. II/24)", these are cut with scissors or torn and glued to a paper base. The predominantly small-format paper fragments partially overlap and in this way form several superimposed layers in places. Overall, the individual paper fragments are harmoniously matched in colour and form a rectangular composition, which Jahns frames with a finely drawn pencil line. The collage is titled after a fragment of text on a blue background that can be read at the top right-hand edge of the picture. The white figure depicted here appears to be floating in the sky or falling from it due to the 90-degree turn chosen by Jahns and its arrangement in the upper half of the picture.