Emma Kunz

Emma Kunz (1892–1963) was a Swiss healer and artist. She published three books and produced many drawings.

Kunz was born to a family of weavers in 1892 in Switzerland.[1] She was not a trained artist; she is characterized as an outsider artist.[2] Her first exhibition, The Case of Emma Kunz, was posthumous. Inspired by spiritual evolution,[1] she divined with a pendulum and created her drawings by radiesthesia.

Said one scholar, in comparing her to other women artists, "Hilma af Klint, Agnes Martin, and Emma Kunz approached geometric abstraction not as formalism, but as a means of structuring philosophical, scientific, and spiritual ideas. Using line, geometry, and the grid, each of these artists created diagrammatic drawings of their exploration of complex belief systems and restorative practices."[3]

Exhibitions

Publications

Notes

  1. 1 2 Ollman, Leah (July 2, 2005). "Los Angeles Times: 'Abstraction' invites look within".
  2. Thorne, Sam (September 2013). "The Encyclopedic Palace". frieze (157).
  3. de Zegher, Catherine (2005). 3 x Abstraction. Yale University Press. p. 29. ISBN 0300108265.

External links


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