RARE
VIEW
The Hungarian Cultural Center is pleased to present Rare View, an exhibition featuring works
by Dezsö Korniss and Pál
Deim from the collection of Miklós Müller and Jan S. Keithly.
Displaying two painters, twenty-one works and one collection, Rare View offers the New York audience
an exceptional look at postwar Hungarian art and the holdings of a New
York-based private collection, never before shown to the public. Through their
competence, passion, and curiosity, Miklós Müller and Jan S. Keithly formed an
outstanding collection, linking artists and works of different historical
periods and stylistic trends from 1920s Expressionism through the organic
abstractions of the European School in the 1940s to contemporary Hungarian art.
Although it presents only a glimpse of the collection’s riches, Rare View hopes to demonstrate these
relationships between epochs and generations through the works of two leading
figures of postwar Hungarian art, Dezsö Korniss and Pál Deim.
Throughout his career, Dezsö Korniss wished to reconcile and synthesize idioms of Modernist painting
with elements of folk art, with the regional, vernacular traditions of
architecture and crafts. As the musical and ethnographical practice of Bartók
and Kodály, Korniss’s art aimed to bring together high and low, local and
universal, abstract and figurative, folklore and avant-garde. His joining of
tradition and innovation lead him to create highly original,
Constructivist-Surrealist paintings built on the motifs of Hungarian folk culture,
as well as an unexpected series of calligraphic works. The drippings, surface
accidents and spontaneous, dynamic marks appearing from the late 1940s on in
the latter, not only relate to, but even anticipate the calligraphic trends of
European lyrical abstraction and of the New York School, especially the works
of Georges Mathieu, Wols, or the drip paintings of Jackson Pollock.
The houses and alleys of Szentendre—a small town on the outskirts of
Budapest—served as a point of departure for both Korniss’s and Deim’s work. It
was in Szentendre, in the 1930s, that Korniss, with his friend and fellow
painter, Lajos Vajda, started to collect and then use the motifs of local
architecture in his pictorial and graphic works. It was also on the streets of
Szentendre, that Deim, following Korniss’s and Vajda’s example, found the raw
material of his art. In Deim’s oeuvre, the semi-geometric, decorative
compositions of Korniss’s folk motif-based art are turned into repetitively
structured overlapping color planes. Building on Korniss’s collages, he created
Surrealistic intersections between architecture and figure, surface and depth
further developing the flatness and the ornamental character of his fellow
painter’s work. Through their shared heritage and interest in vision and
construction, he doesn’t only refer to, but also expands Korniss’s oeuvre, thus
forming a dialogue between them. Rare
View invites viewers to become partners in this conversation, to explore
places and their memories, cultures and their traditions.
For further information please contact the Hungarian Cultural Center.

DEZSÖ KORNISS (1908 - 1984)
An outstanding painter and graphic artist of the Hungarian avant-garde,
Korniss was educated at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts (1925-1929), spent a
year in Paris and then traveled to the Netherlands and Belgium. From 1934 to
1940, with his friend, the painter Lajos Vajda, he worked in Szentendre—a small
town and artist colony, located on the Danube bank, close to Budapest—as well
as in the nearby village of Szigetmonostor. Working with the ornamental motifs
of the local architecture and folk culture, they created paintings and drawings
in a highly individual style combining the characteristic features of both
Constructivist and Surrealist painting. Aiming to create a distinctly Modernist
visual vocabulary based on the tradition of folk art, they followed an artistic
model exemplified in the musical and ethnographical activities of Bartók and
Kodály. After WWII and Vajda’s death in 1941, Korniss became a leading figure
of the European School, a short-lived Hungarian artist group, active between
1945 and 1948. His often-decorative compositions reflect his continuing
interest both in the figurative heritage of Hungarian folklore and in tendencies
of postwar abstraction. From the early 1950s, he created a series of
calligraphic paintings and a large group of graphic works in which he
introduced surface experiments, as well as a diverse range of pictorial methods
from dripping to décalcomanie. From
the 1960s, Korniss became known for his grotesque and humorous collages, his
colorful panels and often monumental oil paintings featuring patterns of the
Hungarian “cifraször” (Hungarian folk embroidery).
PÁL DEIM (1932-)
Painter, sculptor and graphic artist, a native and a resident of
Szentendre, Deim studied at the Hungarian Academy of Fine Arts in Budapest.
Following the tradition of such painters as Lajos Vajda, Jenö Barcsay and Dezsö Korniss, his early
oil and tempera paintings were populated by the fragmented, geometric images of
local alleys and houses, as well as the landscape surrounding Szentendre. In
the 1960s he traveled to the Soviet Union, to Brussels and Paris, and visited
the Prilep monastery in Macedonia. From the late 1960s, he constructed his
paintings and graphic series out of a collage-like arrangement of patterned --
hatched or dotted – surfaces, applied a reduced palette composed of mostly
grayish and blue tones. The decorative, geometric planes were juxtaposed with
organic shapes, and with ciphers and shadows of puppet-like human figures. This
decorative yet strictly structured tension between organic and geometric,
abstract and figurative became a chief characteristic of Deim’s art, and also
appeared on his aluminum-based silk screens. Following his 1974 mid-career
retrospective at the Kunsthalle of Budapest, his work achieved serious critical
attention. From the late 1970s, he also worked on bronze sculptures and
produced a series of rather freely composed works featuring organic motifs and
fluid, graphic signs.