Art exhibition: Otto Nebel. Color Language Form
Otto Nebel was both a painter and a poet. In his work, color, word and form belong closely together. Like many artists of his time, he searched for new forms of expression and combined literature and painting in his own unique way.
In Berlin, he belonged to the artists' group "Der Sturm". In 1919, while a prisoner of war, he wrote the anti-war poem Zuginsfeld. He later invented his own "runic language", in which letters, rhythm and sound became images.
Nebel was forced to leave Germany in 1933 and found a new home with his wife Hilda in Bern. He lived there under difficult conditions, supported by friends and a grant from the Guggenheim Foundation.
He shared a deep spiritual affinity with Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. Trips to Italy shaped his theory of color, in which light and structure became "architectural structures of meaning". His cathedral paintings and later rune paintings show the search for harmony, spirituality and freedom.
An exhibition of the Spiez Castle Foundation in collaboration with the Otto Nebel Foundation Bern.
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.
Tuesday to Friday: 10 am to 5 pm / Monday: 2 pm to 5 pm
July & August until 6 pm
In Berlin, he belonged to the artists' group "Der Sturm". In 1919, while a prisoner of war, he wrote the anti-war poem Zuginsfeld. He later invented his own "runic language", in which letters, rhythm and sound became images.
Nebel was forced to leave Germany in 1933 and found a new home with his wife Hilda in Bern. He lived there under difficult conditions, supported by friends and a grant from the Guggenheim Foundation.
He shared a deep spiritual affinity with Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. Trips to Italy shaped his theory of color, in which light and structure became "architectural structures of meaning". His cathedral paintings and later rune paintings show the search for harmony, spirituality and freedom.
An exhibition of the Spiez Castle Foundation in collaboration with the Otto Nebel Foundation Bern.
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.
Tuesday to Friday: 10 am to 5 pm / Monday: 2 pm to 5 pm
July & August until 6 pm
Dates
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Price info
Art exhibition (incl. castle museum)
Adults: CHF 16.00
Reduced: CHF 14.00
Children (6 to 16 years): CHF 7.00
Children (0 to 6 years): free of charge
Reduced admission:
IV, students, apprentices (on presentation of ID) / groups of 12 or more people
Free admission:
Members of the Friends of Spiez Castle Association, Swiss Museum Pass, ICOM, Raiffeisen (MemberPlus), Swiss Travel Pass, Kulturlegi / on presentation of ID card
Adults: CHF 16.00
Reduced: CHF 14.00
Children (6 to 16 years): CHF 7.00
Children (0 to 6 years): free of charge
Reduced admission:
IV, students, apprentices (on presentation of ID) / groups of 12 or more people
Free admission:
Members of the Friends of Spiez Castle Association, Swiss Museum Pass, ICOM, Raiffeisen (MemberPlus), Swiss Travel Pass, Kulturlegi / on presentation of ID card
Contact person
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