Mati Klarwein
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(Abdul) Mati Klarwein | |
Birth name | Matias Klarwein |
Born | April 9, 1932 Hamburg, Weimar Republic, Germany |
Died | March 7, 2002 (aged 69) Deià, Majorca, Spain |
Nationality | Spanish |
Field | Painting, Drawing, Film |
Training | Academie Julian, the Beaux Arts, Paris |
Movement | Surrealism, Fantastic Realism, Visionary Art, Psychedelic Art |
Works | Annunciation (1961) Grain of Sand (1963-65) Bitches Brew (1969) Aleph Sanctuary (1963-70) |
Abdul Mati Klarwein (April 9, 1932 – March 7, 2002) was a painter best known for his works used on the covers of music albums.
Contents |
[edit] Biography
Klarwein was born in Hamburg, Germany. His family was of Jewish origin and fled to Palestine when he was two years old after the rise of Nazi Germany. Klarwein grew up in Palestine but in 1948 when the territory was became Israel, his family traveled to Paris. There Mati studied with Fernand Leger, after attending the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Klarwein traveled south to Saint-Tropez and met Ernst Fuchs, who would have a profound influence on him. Leaving France in the 1950s, Klarwein traveled widely and lived in many different countries, including Tibet, India, Bali, North Africa, Turkey, Europe and the Americas[1]. He eventually settled in New York City in the early 1960s.[2]
Much of Klarwein's most famous work is inspired by surrealism and pop culture, but also reflects his interest in non-Western deities, symbolism, and landscapes. The alleged connection between Klarwein and the so-called psychedelic art of the period is not entirely unfounded, as he has detailed his experience with LSD in his 1988 book Collected Works; however, Klarwein also explains that drugs were never his prime inspirational source[3], and in one interview, denies their influence entirely. His extensive travels and wide interests (notwithstanding the fact that his style had fully developed before the so-called "psychedelic era") are further support of his claims. Klarwein claims that his friend Timothy Leary once told him, based on the character of his paintings, that Klarwein "didn't need psychedelics." [4]
In his painting Grain of Sand (1963-1965), many disparate images are combined together in one massive, yet oddly coherent work. Klarwein's own words illuminate the work: "I projected it as a sort of painted musical comedy movie with a sanskrit swinging cast of thousands, starring Marilyn Monroe, Anita Ekberg, Ray Charles, Pablo Picasso, Brigitte Bardot, Roland Kirk, Cannonball Adderley, Ahmed Abdul Malik, Wonderwoman, Delacroix's girl in the cemetry, Litri and his bullshit fighters, Lawrence of Arabia, Socrates, Dali, Rama, Vishnu, Ganesh, the Zork and a Milky Way of playmates."[5]
Klarwein added "Abdul" (which means "servant" in Arabic) to his name in the late 1950s to express his sentiments about the hostility between Jews and Muslims in the Middle East: he felt that to understand each other better, every Jew should adopt a Muslim first name, and vice-versa.[2] He is not known to have converted to Islam. He removed the name when, in 1960, he approached jazz musician Yusef Lateef after a concert. Lateef, who had previously expressed interest in using Klarwein's work for a future album cover, saw that Klarwein was white, and turned away without a word.[1]
Despite this unfortunate encounter, during the 1960s Klarwein's work would be appreciated and utilized on several records by some of the decade's most progressive musicians. Klarwein's painting Annunciation (1961) was seen in reproduction by the musician Carlos Santana, who subsequently used it as the cover image of his band Santana's second album Abraxas (1970). In the following years Klarwein produced comparably striking designs for the covers of two Miles Davis albums, Bitches Brew (1969) and Live-Evil (1971), as well as a portrait of Jimi Hendrix, which was supposed to have been used for the guitarist's collaboration album with big band leader Gil Evans, which never came to fruition due to the guitarist's death.[1] His painting Zonked (1970), originally planned for use on a Betty Davis album of the same name,[1] would later be used as the cover of a Last Poets album Holy Terror (1995). (For a complete list of albums which feature Klarwein's art, see below.) The association of his images with these very successful and widely admired counterculture musicians made Klarwein's work known outside the circle of lovers of contemporary art. Many of these paintings, and others, were included in Klarwein's first book Milk n' Honey (1973).
During the 1960s and 70s, Klarwein would occasionally search for cheap paintings at flea markets and "improve" them, painting over them or adding things at his whim. Klarwein made over a hundred of these "improved paintings" throughout his career.[1]
In the mid-1970s, Klarwein began a series of paintings which he referred to as "real-estate paintings" or "inscapes". In the late 1970s he collaborated with trumpeter Jon Hassell for a couple albums on Brain Eno's Ambient label; these albums used several of Klarwein's "inscapes" on their covers. Klarwein also contributed art to three albums by Per Tjernberg.[1]
Klarwein is still best known for his art of the 1960s and 1970s, with its clear links to surrealism (Klarwein studied with Salvador Dalí and the Viennese Fantastic Realist Ernst Fuchs), popular psychedelic imagery, and religious art from a number of different traditions. He also worked more conventionally across a variety of genres including still life, landscape, and portrait.
Late in this life, Klarwein contracted cancer, which would eventually take his life. He died on March 7th, 2002 in Deià, Spain on the island of Majorca.
[edit] Album Covers
- Aïyb Dieng/Bill Laswell - Rhythmagick (1997)
- Buddy Miles - Live (1971)
- Buddy Miles - Message to the People (1971)
- Buddy Miles Express - Hell and Back (1994)
- Earth, Wind & Fire - Last Days and Time (1972)
- Elements - Illumination (1987)
- Elements - Forward Motion (1990?)
- Eric Dolphy - Iron Man (1963)
- George Duke - (Secret?) Rendezvous (19??)
- Gregg Allman - Laid Back (1973)
- Hermeto Pascoal y Grupo - Só Não Toca Quem Não Quer (Only If You Don't Want It) (1987)
- Howard Wales & Jerry Garcia - Hooteroll? (1971)
- Jackie McLean - Demon's Dance (1968?)
- Jam & Spoon (feat. Plavka) - Kaleidoscope (1997)
- Joe Beck - Beck (1975)
- Jon Hassell - Maarifa Street: Magic Realism 2 (2005)
- Jon Hassell - Magic Realism: Aka/Darbari/Java (1983)
- Jon Hassell - Fourth World vol. 2: Dream Theory in Malaya (1981)
- Leonard Bernstein - Age of Anxiety (19??)
- Mark Egan - Mosaic (1985)
- Miles Davis - Bitches Brew (1970)
- Miles Davis - Live-Evil (1971)
- Osibisa - Heads (1972)
- Per Tjernberg & Mati Klarwein - No Man's Land (1997)
- Per Tjernberg - Universal Riddim (2000)
- Per Tjernberg - Universal Riddim 2 (2005)
- Reuben Wilson - Blue Mode (1970?)
- Santana - Abraxas (1968)
- Symphonic Slam - Symphonic Slam (1976)
- Tempest - Living in Fear (1974)
- The Chambers Brothers - New Generation (1970)
- The Last Poets - This Is Madness (1971)
- The Last Poets - Holy Terror (1994)
- The Maids of Gravity - The First Second (1996)
- The Mooney Suzuki - Alive & Amplified (2004)
- White Lightnin' - White Lightnin' (19??)
[edit] Bibliography
- Milk n' Honey (1973) Harmony Books, New York
- God Jokes (1976) Harmony Books, New York
- Inscapes: Real-Estate Paintings (1983) Harmony Books, New York
- Collected Works 1959-1975 (1988) Raymond Martin Press, Germany
- A Thousand Windows and Improved Paintings: Bad Paintings Made Gooder (1995) Max Publishing, Spain
- Improved Paintings 1979-2000 (2000) Max Publishing, Spain
- Paradise Lost and Found (2005) ISBN 84-96430-13-8
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f lush life: mati klarwein by Rob Young
- ^ a b Really Fantastic: Glenn O'Brien on Mati Klarwein - Slant - Obituary
- ^ Mati Klarwein: Collected Works 1959-1975; Harmony Books, New York, ©1988
- ^ http://web.archive.org/web/20070807204534/http://www.levity.com/mavericks/mati.htm Internet Archive: Mati Klarwein Interview
- ^ Grain of Sand by Mati Klarwein - Surrealist and Visionary Art