August Klotz

http://dbpedia.org/resource/August_Klotz an entity of type: Thing

August Klett (geboren 1864 oder 1866 in Heilbronn; gestorben 1928 in Weinsberg) war ein deutscher Art-brut-Künstler. Er gehörte zu den „schizophrenen Meistern“, wie ihn der Psychiater Hans Prinzhorn in seinem Buch „Bildnerei der Geisteskranken“ porträtierte. Das Pseudonym Klotz bzw. August Klotz wurde von Prinzhorn zur Anonymisierung vergeben. rdf:langString
August Klett, or Klotz (1866–1928), was a German outsider artist with schizophrenia and one of the "schizophrenic masters" profiled by Hans Prinzhorn in his field-defining work Artistry of the Mentally Ill. The pseudonym August Klotz (Klotz being a disparaging term for a person of low intelligence) was given by Prinzhorn. rdf:langString
rdf:langString August Klett (Künstler)
rdf:langString August Klotz
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rdf:langString October 2016
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rdf:langString August Klett, or Klotz (1866–1928), was a German outsider artist with schizophrenia and one of the "schizophrenic masters" profiled by Hans Prinzhorn in his field-defining work Artistry of the Mentally Ill. The pseudonym August Klotz (Klotz being a disparaging term for a person of low intelligence) was given by Prinzhorn. He was born in Heilbronn. His father was a prosperous Swabian merchant, and Klotz worked in his father's business as a wine and champagne salesman for many years. Aside from a case of gonorrhea, he was healthy until an attack of influenza in 1903. After his illness he fell into a deep depression in which he heard hallucinatory voices insulting him. He attempted suicide by slashing his abdomen with a knife. Klotz was placed in an asylum in Göppingen where his case notes describe him as engaged in art-making by August 1903. He rubbed figures into his wallpaper with fat and called them "Freemason signs". He created charts in which letters correspond to numbers, the sums of which correspond to colors. This may be evidence that he experienced an unusual form of grapheme-color synaesthesia. Klotz loved playing word games, and this same playfulness is apparent in his drawings and watercolors. He often invented lengthy compound nouns, such as Halmdolchfischgradtropfeneweiss ("Stalk-dagger-fish-bone-drop-egg-white"), and his pictures sometimes feature shapes that have double meanings. An example is Klotz's drawing Wurmlöcher (Wormholes), which Roger Cardinal describes as depicting "a head in profile with wavy hair that incorporates fingertips, worms, and caterpillar heads. Another part of the head juxtaposes nuns and flamingoes". Unlike most outsider artists, Klotz displayed little consistency in his work. He sometimes began a drawing by placing a stone on a sheet of paper and tracing a line around it. Prinzhorn saw him as a shining example of the creative impulse at its most basic. "He always allows himself to be driven by momentary impulses so that his pictures generally incorporate the unconscious components of pictorial creation in a rare state of purity ... he composes completely passively, almost as a spectator, and afterward tries to interpret his configurations".
rdf:langString August Klett (geboren 1864 oder 1866 in Heilbronn; gestorben 1928 in Weinsberg) war ein deutscher Art-brut-Künstler. Er gehörte zu den „schizophrenen Meistern“, wie ihn der Psychiater Hans Prinzhorn in seinem Buch „Bildnerei der Geisteskranken“ porträtierte. Das Pseudonym Klotz bzw. August Klotz wurde von Prinzhorn zur Anonymisierung vergeben.
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