Animals in Monumental Pose

Provenance

By descent to the artist's wife, Lily Klee (died 1946), Berne, 1940 [according to the Klee Foundation]; Klee-Gesellschaft, Berne, 1946-1948 [according to the Klee Foundation]. Curt Valentin Gallery, New York, 1948 [according to the Klee Foundation]; sold to the Art Institute, 1949.

Animals in Monumental Pose

Paul Klee

1933

Accession Number

64309

Medium

Black crayon on cream wove tracing paper, hinged to cream wove card

Dimensions

44.4 × 26.6 cm (17 1/2 × 10 1/2 in.)

Classification

pen and ink drawings

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Mrs. Walter P. Paepcke, Mrs. Alice H. Patterson and Margaret Day Blake funds

Background & Context

Background Story

Paul Klee's Animals in Monumental Pose depicts animals with a simplified, monumental treatment that gives them weight and presence. Klee's animals carry symbolic meanings and receive the same formal attention as his human subjects.

Cultural Impact

Klee's animal imagery demonstrates the range of his symbolic vocabulary.

Why It Matters

These animals in monumental pose carry the weight of symbolic meaning through Klee's simplified forms.