Description 1914. oil on board. Signed, dated and titled 'Münter, Dame im Park, Mariahalde' and with the Nachlass Stamp (on reverse). Kandinsky und Gabriele Münter. Von Ursprüngen moderner Kunst (Kandinsky and Gabriele Münter. On the Origins of Modern Art) the events of 1914: “In 1914, Kandinsky and Gabriele Münter had been spending the summer in Murnau when the war broke out. On August 1, they returned to Munich and took an overcrowded train to Lindau on the 3rd, being joined by a sister- in-law of Kandinsky’s, her husband (a justice of the peace), and their daughter. On the 4th they crossed Lake Constance to Rorschach and, on the 6th, arrived at Villa Mariahalde near Goldach on Lake Constance, an empty country house that belonged to their landlady in Munich, The house, which they had to furnish with rented furniture, was anything but comfortable. Work was completely unthinkable. Kandinsky spent his time pondering over questions that he was not to deal with in his writings until much later, in 1926, in Punkt und Linie zu Fl?che (Point and Line to Plane).”
Dimensions 13 x 16 Framed 22 x 25 1/2 in.
Condition Report No in-paint or restoration.
Provenance Estate of the artist. Leonard Hutton Galleries, New York (acquired from the above). The Estate of Jane F. Sheets, Buffalo, New York.