Ghost Chamber with the Tall Door (New Version). Artist: Paul Klee (German (born Switzerland), Münchenbuchsee 1879-1940 Muralto-Locarno). Dimensions: 24 in. × 16 5/8 in. (61 × 42.2 cm). Date: 1925.In the early 1920s, Klee painted a series of ghost chambers with eerie lines of perspective that reduce everything to skeletal transparency. As Klee rarely used perspective, he applied it in these works-always interiors-solely to show its delusive effects, a theory he relayed to his students in his Bauhaus lectures on the subject in November 1921. He demonstrates that perspective can be playful in this watercolor of an orange room cluttered with black wire utensils and with a tall violet door from which seemingly radiate the black perspectival lines. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.

Ghost Chamber with the Tall Door (New Version). Artist: Paul Klee (German (born Switzerland), Münchenbuchsee 1879-1940 Muralto-Locarno). Dimensions: 24 in. × 16 5/8 in. (61 × 42.2 cm). Date: 1925.In the early 1920s, Klee painted a series of ghost chambers with eerie lines of perspective that reduce everything to skeletal transparency. As Klee rarely used perspective, he applied it in these works-always interiors-solely to show its delusive effects, a theory he relayed to his students in his Bauhaus lectures on the subject in November 1921. He demonstrates that perspective can be playful in this watercolor of an orange room cluttered with black wire utensils and with a tall violet door from which seemingly radiate the black perspectival lines. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA.
SuperStock offers millions of photos, videos, and stock assets to creatives around the world. This image of Ghost Chamber with the Tall Door (New Version). Artist: Paul Klee (German (born Switzerland), Münchenbuchsee 1879-1940 Muralto-Locarno). Dimensions: 24 in. × 16 5/8 in. (61 × 42.2 cm). Date: 1925.In the early 1920s, Klee painted a series of ghost chambers with eerie lines of perspective that reduce everything to skeletal transparency. As Klee rarely used perspective, he applied it in these works-always interiors-solely to show its delusive effects, a theory he relayed to his students in his Bauhaus lectures on the subject in November 1921. He demonstrates that perspective can be playful in this watercolor of an orange room cluttered with black wire utensils and with a tall violet door from which seemingly radiate the black perspectival lines. Museum: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, USA. by Album/Album Archivo is available for licensing today.
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Image Number: 4409-17401080Rights ManagedCredit Line:Album/Album Archivo/SuperStockCollection:Album ArchivoContributor:AlbumModel Release:NoProperty Release:NoResolution:2603×4094
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