Exhibition
Kleve: Gerd Ludwig
Joseph Beuys

Joseph Beuys in the kolk near Rindern © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys with cradle and hare in Mehr near the Dassendonkshof © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys in his studio at the Drakeplatz in Düsseldorf © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys, January 26, 1978 © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys on the levee near Düffelward © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys walks down an alley of poplar trees in the Düffel area © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys in the Freiherr-vom-Stein-Gymnasium in Kleve © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys in his former school in Kleve © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys in Mehr at the Dassendonkshof owned by the van Heukelum family © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys on the roof of Koekkoek Belverdere, Hanns Lamers’ tower © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys collects soil in the Düffel area © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys in the courtyard adjacent to his studio at the Drakeplatz in Düsseldorf © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys after a private performance at Schloss Gnadenthal holding a biography of Anarchis Cloots written by Dr. Carl Richter in 1865 © Gerd Ludwig

Joseph Beuys on the levee near Düffelward © Gerd Ludwig

© Gerd Ludwig
In January 1978, photographer Gerd Ludwig and journalist Peter Sager went on a journey to the Lower Rhine with Joseph Beuys. It led them back to Beuys’ origins, back to his roots, into the city of Kleve and its surroundings in which it all began.
Gerd Ludwig’s photographs captured Joseph Beuys as he was reconnecting with his past. Some of the photos he produced were published in the German weekly “Zeit-Magazin” in April 1978, accompanied by an essay written by Peter Sager. However, a corpus of his work remained unpublished and unseen by the public up to this day. 18 images, including many never before published, are now on display at the Museum Kurhaus Kleve in Germany through January 13th, 2013.
To Beuys, it was a “look back into the landscape,” as Sager wrote. He went trough Kleve’s Lower Rhine landscape with its deep horizons and soaring skies. “This is his landscape, very simple and with depth, sparse, like his works” – with hares, poplar trees and swans. Beuys visited the places of his childhood and youth, like his former school in Kleve, now called “Freiherr-vom-Stein Gymnasium”. He engaged its students in a discussion about art, as well as the “meaning of life,” as Sager says. Schloss Gnadenthal was the last stop of his journey. It is the place where Anacharsis Cloots, who was nicknamed “orator of mankind” and whose work served as an important inspiration for Beuys, was born in 1755. Symbolically, in one of the photographs Beuys is holding Cloots’ biography in his own hands.
Guido de Werd, Curator at Museum Kurhaus Kleve
Gerd Ludwig - Joseph Beuys
09.09.2012–13.01.2013
Museum Kurhaus Kleve
Tiergartenstraße 41
47533 Kleve - Germany
Tel: +49-(0)2821-750 10
Fax: +49-(0)2821-750 111
E-Mail: info@museumkurhaus.de
Links
http://www.museumkurhaus.de/
http://www.gerdludwig.com/
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