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Mati Klarwein

mati_klarwein

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Artist and Model - 1959
The following excepts about Abdul Mati Klarwein come from art-bin.com/art/aklarwein.html and are copywritten © by Conny C Lindström and Peter Holmlund.
The Manic Landscape:
Mati Klarwein
by Conny C Lindström and Peter Holmlund
Mati Klarwein was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1932. Two years later, following Hitler's coming into power, he fled with his parents to Palestine, now Israel. "I grew up in three different cultures, the Jewish, Islamic and the Christian. These circumstances and my family's stern resistance against being part of any kind of orthodoxy has made me the outsider I am today and always has been," Mati says and pours himself another cup of tea. "That is also why I took the name Abdul. If everybody in the Middle-East would call themselves Abdul, it would ensure a reconciliation that would end the antagonism and the wars in that part of the world. At least that's what I thought at the time."
Anyone who spends a few days with Mati will soon discover that this is a typical statement. His gentle ways and general open-mindedness stems from his multi-cultural background and his experiences during the psychedelic era. And the figurative language that he has made his own largely consists of sensual images powered with the magical and mystical symbolism that is closely connected to the ideals of that time.
In the fifties Mati Klarwein moved to Paris, a city then seething with existentialist ideas and jazz music.
"My ambition was to go to Hollywood and become a movie director, but instead I went to Paris and studied painting for Fernand Léger. I realise Fernand's greatness, but he was never any direct source of inspiration to me. His main contribution to my artistic development was introducing me to the art of Salvador Dalí. The movie Un Chien Andalou virtually took my breath away."
"I was also profoundly influenced by both the Italian renaissance painters and the Flemish masters. Not to mention Indian tantric art!"
After a few years in the French capital he took residence on the Riviera, in the town of S:t Tropez. There he became aquainted to numerous socialites, such as Brigitte Bardot, and also met two people that would change the course of both his private and professional lives. One was Ernst Fuchs, who advised him to refine his oil paintings by inducing part of casein tempera, something Mati has stuck to ever since. The other was a wealthy woman, some twenty years older than him who became his passion, mecenate, educator and travelling companion for the next seven years to come. Together they visited almost every part of the planet scurrying from Tibet, India and Bali in the east, over North Africa, Turkey and across Europe to Cuba and America in the west. Travels that supplied Mati with enough visual memories to fuel his artwork until this very day.
Mati with Brigette Bardot
In New York in 1964 Mati - by then Abdul Mati - caused a commotion after having exhibited his blasphemic painting Crucifixion. The motif of the painting being a myriad of people caught in a garden of earthly delights, where no sexual, racial or gender barriers are bearing any significance. Something that threw parts of the society in such a rage that Mati at one point even was attacked by a man violently chopping away with a huge axe.
Even though Crucifixion caused a lot of animosity at the time, it was also to become part of the Aleph Sanctuary, a temple-like building consisting of 78 paintings from Mati's production, that made him climb from obscurity into a long-awaited place in the sun. The Aleph Sanctuary, namely, was the place where Carlos Santana spent hours tripping out in profound meditation over the painting Annonciation, later to become the record cover of his million selling album Abraxas.
"At the time it must have been the second-most well-known painting in the world, besides Leonardo da Vinci's La Gioconda," Mati says with a bitter-sweet smile at the comparison with the renaissance giant.
Not only Santana would choose to utilise the vivid and intricate imagery of Mati's paintings as the visual embodiment of his musical expression. When Miles Davis in 1970 changed the shape of jazz to come by fusing jazz with rock, he too chose Mati paintings for the covers of the classic albums Bitches Brew and Live-Evil.
"In the beginning of the seventies I made yet another painting, Zonked, for an album where his then wife Betty Davis were singing on several tracks. But when Miles found out that she was fucking Jimi Hendrix he cancelled the release. The painting, however, came to use twenty years later on a an album by the rap-originators Last Poets."
"Speaking of Jimi Hendrix, we used to share the same tailor, and we would spend afternoons dropping acid and trying out new sets of clothes together. I actually was working on a painting for a record cover to an album that was never finished, where Jimi and Gil Evans were collaborating. Unfortunately Jimi died during the recordings and it was never released. I finished the painting though and it has been touring around the world on that mobile Jimi Hendrix exhibition."
Mati's works came to express the spirit of a whole generation of musicians ranging from the late Jerry Garcia to the equally late, great Eric Dolphy. Wherever there would be soul-searching, astral-travelling and mind-expanding records churned out, there would also be cover paintings by Mati Klarwein. A fact that possibly shut him out from the conventional art establishment.
"My coming across as a painter in that fashion is probably the reason why I don't belong to the history of art today. Neither have I ever worked conventionally with galleries or any other forum within the well-defined boundaries of the world of art," Mati points out.
On the other hand are his views on the values of paintings far from conventional. Most of his famous paintings are scattered around the world, and Mati doesn't know, or care for that matter, where they are.
"I have no idea where the one I painted for Bitches Brew is today. But I do know that the original for Abraxas was sold to a royal Moroccan. I'm actually not interested in what so ceremoniously is called originals, to tell you the truth. If somebody wants me to, I'll just do them again. To me it's the image, not the texture that's important."
Another example of his unorthodox attitude towards art is what he calls "improved paintings". "The idea is somewhat resemblant to what in music is called sampling. I buy existing paintings wherever I come across them and continue working on them according to my own desire, he confides and demonstrates a catalogue of his works."
Improved work example
The concept might seem partly analogous to Andy Warhol's screen prints. Warhol who once stated that Mati was his favourite painter, fraternised in the same circle of socialites as Mati did in New York. And most of the money Mati brought in was from painting portraits of rich and famous people and their houses. Among the people requiring his services were Jackie Kennedy, David Niven, Brigitte Bardot, Richard Gere, Leonard Bernstein and Michael Douglas to name but a few.
"I still paint portraits to make money, but I also do it in exchange for services or things that I want. For example I portrayed the house of my printer and in return he financed the entire edition of my forthcoming book with poetry and paintings."
Parked down at the entrance is another of his most recent trades: a white Mercedes, which he got in return for a portrait of his neighbour, the German photographer Bettina Rheims.
Since the early eighties, however, in the paintings that neither are "improved" nor portraits, there has hardly been any people at all. Instead he has been painting Majorcan landscapes, meticulously crafted and at times spiced with imaginary beings. Or archetypal figures that appear either like reminiscences from his geographical travels or from his excursions into his own mind. And this later line of paintings has renewed the interest among certain musicians, like Jon Hassel, for the dreamlike imagery of Mati Klarwein. Although the objects of his dreams have changed over the years, the dreams are still his most important source of inspiration.
"There was a time when I dreamed of sex, and then I dreamed of drugs. Soon I will be dreaming light," says Mati prophetically.
Article End...
Eleonore Ananda - 1975
Turkish Delight
self portrait
Robert Venosa on his apprenticeship with Mati - "New York City born, Venosa was transported into the world of fine art in the late 60's after having experimented with psychedelics and having seen the work of the Fantastic Realists - Ernst Fuchs and Mati Klarwein in particular - both of whom he eventually met and studied under. Of his apprenticeship with Klarwein, Venosa says, 'What a time (Autumn, 1970) that turned out to be! Not only did I get started in proper technique, but at various times I had Jimi Hendrix, Miles Davis, Jackie Kennedy and the good doctor Tim Leary himself peering over my shoulder to see what I was up to.'"
Venosa, Mati and Eleonore Klarwein, 1971 Boulder, CO
Olive Trees - twoINone
Bellin Family - 1973
..

My Interests


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Surreal Visionary Fantastic Art & Metamorphosis Art Book



Welcome to "A Tribute To The Enigma Of Mati Klarwein"

Self Portrait Durur - 1957

Manifesto of Visionary Art By Laurence Caruana

Great essay at www.beinart.org

Part of my Tribute is establishing communication with those who knew and/or interacted with Mati. I recently met up (through Myspace) with Prof. Philip Rubinov Jacobson and he was kind enough to share an experience he had with Mati.
Prof. Phil , "Although we had both studied painting with Ernst Fuchs during our life, Mati and I did not actually meet until 1980 while I was living with De Es Schwertberger in So Ho, New York city. At the time I was organizing the New York Visionaries for an exhibition on Madison Avenue, the first visionary/fantastic show of its kind on the elite strip of galleries in the "City that Never Sleeps". Our first meeting was at Mati's loft and I was amazed to see his originals for the first time. I had admired his work for a long time. As the time in New York passed, being some 21 years my senior, I often referred to him as ' Uncle Mati'. Mati was renowned for his sharp wit and direct uncompromising truth, which I learned first hand and appreciated. Stopping by the studio one day, Mati critiqued a work of mine entitled "Page From a Dream". I had started this piece while I was studying with Fuchs in Vienna when I was 19 years old and finished it when I was 20. Now I wanted to add something to it. Mati stood behind me as I sat painting. I paused and layed down my mahl stick and brush. I watched his eyes as he scanned my painting intently and then he finally spoke in a very serious tone: " The portrait is very good, but your tree looks like a sausage". My head sank down a little and he added, "...well. you want it to look like a tree don't you?" Yes, I said. "Well then quit being lazy, the tree should be every bit as good as the portrait". Yes, you are right, I will work on it, I responded. "But the portrait is really good!" he added once again. Thanks Uncle Mati, I responded, as he got ready to leave. I walked him out to the front door and on the way he put his hand on my shoulder, smiled and said, "Phil, you will be a great painter if you aren't lazy." As I smiled back, I said; Thanks Mati!"

Promethean Flames - Rekindling and Re-visioning the Creative Fire
by Professor Phillip Rubinov-Jacobson

An extensive article on Mati by Rob Young, for The Wire in 1998 HERE...

An interview with Mati by David Jay Brown in 1992 while he was visiting Santa Monica, California HERE...

Laurence Caruana provides a review of Mati's art and life from a visionary artist's perpective HERE...

Quote from Mati regarding Salvador Dali - "I read Dali's "Private Life Of Salvador Dali" when I was 20 years old and I have never been the same person since. I met him at the age of 30 for the first time, and we saw each other regularly in New York and Paris during the 60s and early 70s. He was my spiritual father, and some even thought I was his illegitimate son. We were also each other's pimps and cultural spies. " Here is "The Hallucinogenic Torreador".

One of Mati's teachers and founder of the Vienna school of Fantastic Realism - Professor Ernst Fuchs (website). A painter, allegorist and architect, who has had a profound influence on a generation of visionary artists. Here is "The Temptation of the Victor".

A wonderful visionary artist who wrote a very nice remembrance piece about Mati which you can read on this page - Alex Grey's website. Here is "Kissing".

Sometime student of Mati's, and fellow student of Ernst Fuchs, Robert Venosa(website). He is a visionary artist, painter, sculptor and film designer. Here is "Atomus Spiritus Christi".

Another artist who knew Mati personally (see blog) and studied with Ernst Fuchs in applying classical techniques to the genre of visionary art Prof. Phillip Rubinov-Jacobson
The Onyx Muse

Intuitus Mysticus

Please visit Prof. Phil's Website Here

The Society for Art of Imagination is a group covering Fantastic Realism, Magic Realism, Surrealism and Visionary Art, with a manifesto to 'battle the spirit of anti-art that is endemic around us'. This site features many fascinating galleries covering the work of a broad spectrum of artists of imagination, CLICK HERE.

You can check out the following page on www.matiklarweinart.com for a few other links of interest by CLICKING HERE.

I'd like to meet:



In Memory of Abdul Mati Klarwein 1932- 2002 by Alex Grey, @

alexgrey.net/mati.htm

The divinely inspired Mati Klarwein created some of the world's most visionary and astonishing paintings with meticulous brush strokes of genius. I was introduced to Mati's work in 1974 by my roommate from art school who showed me Milk 'n Honey (Harmony Books, 1973), Mati's first book of paintings. The book is now a rare collectors item. Milk 'n Honey documents Mati's climactic masterpiece, the Aleph Sanctuary, a work dedicated to "the undefined religion of everything". With 70 painted panels, it took him ten years to complete.Mati worked for two years on some paintings, like his Crucifixion (Freedom of Expression) an unforgettably infinite interacial orgy spread over a wide-branched tree of life. Another two year piece was Grain of Sand, an unexplainably complex and weird mandala of bodies, melting minds, aliens and flowers, with cameo appearances by Lord Krishna, Salvador Dali, Marilyn Monroe and Socrates, et al, which exactly duplicated itself in miniature at it's center.

In 1976, I was excited to see Klarwein's second book, God Jokes. By this time I had taken LSD and, like many other acidheads, found Mati to be my number one fine art reference point. Klarwein was able to capture the multi-colored iridescent visions and patterns of the inner worlds demonstrating what an experienced psychonaut and fanatically disciplined painter he was.

Mati was born in 1930 in Hamburg, Germany and his Jewish parents escaped the Nazis by moving to Palestine in 1934. His earliest memories were walking through the deserts of Bibleland. With the war in full blast establishing Israel as a nation in 1948, Mati and his mother left for Paris. Staying in Paris for 18 years, Mati studied art with Ferdinand Leger, was introduced to the art of Dali and befriended the painter Ernst Fuchs, who taught him how to paint like the Old Masters. Mati later lived for many years in New York City, then moved to the island of Mallorca, Spain. He said that he added the name Abdul to his own because every Jew ought to adopt a Moslem name and every Moslem ought to adopt a Jewish name in order to overcome some of the hatred that engulfed his homeland. He was a totally charming raconteur and hobnobbed with celebrities like Jimi Hendrix, Timothy Leary, moviestars and royalty throughout his life. As Michael Palin put it, "Things happen after a bottle of Klarwein." My own daughter, Zena, who was 5 when she met the 63 year old painter, decided that she would marry him when she grew up.

Mati was an example of uncompromising artistic integrity. He once told me that he had prepared a huge book of his paintings for a major art book publisher and the first word of the book was "Fuck." The publisher was anxious to get Klarwein's book in print but said, "You can't have fuck be the first word of your book!" So Mati told him, " Fuck is the first word, so I guess you can't publish the book." Mati went on to publish his own books "A Thousand Windows and Improved Paintings: Bad Paintings Made Gooder. Klarwein's writing style was as unique and outrageous as his paintings." He was a grand storyteller and spun both long-winded dream epics and psychedelic one-liners like, "Ecstasy is my frame of reference."

I was thrilled to finally meet Mati in 1994 and glad to know that he appreciated my work and felt a fellowship with so many of the younger visionary artists whom he inspired. Though he knew that the art of the fantastic realists, including his own work, was not accepted enough during his lifetime to find its way into many major museum collections, his advice to me for overcoming artistic disrespect was practical and realistic: "You have to find and pay the best art critics to write about the work and show in respected galleries." Mati showed his work in galleries and museums throughout his life and also sold works to collectors out of his studio.

He never tried to make his work marketable, but could sell every painting he made. Outside the confines of the artworld most everyone had seen his work through his record covers for Santana or Miles Davis or Buddy Miles. During his full and adventurous life, Mati traveled the world and maintained his relationships with friends, wives, lovers and his many children. He was an inspiration to so many artists because he expressed the freedom to imagine and paint anything. He visited and painted mystical dimensions of consciousness, and could coax us into spiritualized epiphanies one moment then plunge us into completely bizarre erotic frenzies. I join with many artists and admirers in feeling grateful that Mati Klarwein lived and left us his visionary legacy. Like a cosmic comedian with a wry grin who appreciated God jokes and a magic mushroom paintbrush, his paintings will continue to provoke both awe and laughter as they tweak the ass of our psyche.

For more about Mati Klarwein, go to
www.matiklarweinart.com

Vishnu - 1967-1968

God Mother - 1973

Blessing - 1965

Visit - 1996

Landscape Perceived - 1963

Landscape Described - 1963

moonlight - 2000

Art Critic - 1976

Time - 1965

Nativity - 1961

Soundscape - 1982

Moses and Aaron - 1971

Athens Angel - 1960's

Byzantine Angel - 1968

Demeter - 1986

African Angel - 1964

Four Seasons - Spring - 1958

Four Seasons - Summer - 1958

Four Seasons - Autumn - 1958

Four Seasons - Winter - 1958

Grain of Sand - Quadrant A - 1963-65

Grain of Sand - Quadrant B - 1963-65

Grain of Sand - Quadrant C - 1963-65

Grain of Sand - Quadrant D - 1963-65

Julie Awake - 1974

Adam - Original - 1964

Music:

The following collection of Music Albums that use Mati's art was compiled HERE (www.rateyourmusic.com by user "alabaster")...

Portrait of Jimi Hendrix

Annunciation by Mati Klarwein - 1961, used on the cover of "Abraxas" by Santana

Mati Klarwein Gallery - Bitches Brew - 1970

For Miles Davis "Live - Evil" Album

Live - 1971

Evil - 1971

Exterminating Angel - 1968

Mati with Jon Hassell

Jon Hassell - Maarifa Street: Magic Realism 2

Leonard Bernstein - 1964

Books:



Heroes:

Laure Klarwein - 1986

Salvador Klarwein - 1995

Serafine Milinaire - 1979

Eleonore Klaarwein - 1982

Elsa Klarwein - 1958

Josef Klarwein - 1955

Harmel Klarwein - 1991

Serafine and Galaad Milinaire - 1979

Katy Navarro - 1990

Susan Berns - 1970

Sophie Bollock - 1963

Bunny Mellon - 60's

First Daughter - 1993

Barcelona Family - 1994

Giaume Family - 1998

Donatella Horowitz - 1974

My Blog

Interactions With Mati - A Tale From Prof. Philip Rubinov-Jacobson

One of the best things about composing this "Tribute to Mati Klarwein" has been communicating with some of the top visionary artists that are still living in this plane of existance. To date I have t...
Posted by Mati Klarwein on Mon, 10 Mar 2008 08:54:00 PST

St. John

In the beginning was the word "In" and then came the word "Out". These five paintings are five sections of the outside view from the old tower which I used as a studio, overlooking the beach of Deya ...
Posted by Mati Klarwein on Thu, 07 Feb 2008 06:16:00 PST

Milk and Honey

Although considered a psychedelic artist by some, when asked in an interview "How do you feel about being classified as a psychedelic painter?" his response was: I think it's subjective. Anybody can ...
Posted by Mati Klarwein on Thu, 31 Jan 2008 08:23:00 PST

Enigma

"Abdul Mati Klarwein is a visionary poet of the sublime.  He is an artist of amazing technical virtuosity.  He is also an enigma that an ever widening audience is trying to solve."Ronald A. KuchtaDire...
Posted by Mati Klarwein on Thu, 24 Jan 2008 06:25:00 PST

Artist and Model - 1959

Although best known for his surrealist and visionary art of the psychedelic era - especially the album covers he produced for the likes of Miles Davis, Santana, Earth Wind and Fire, and many more, Mat...
Posted by Mati Klarwein on Thu, 24 Jan 2008 06:15:00 PST