Quick Facts
Née:
Sophie Henriette Gertrude Taeuber
Taeuber also spelled:
Täuber
Born:
January 19, 1889, Davos, Switzerland
Died:
January 13, 1943, Zürich (aged 53)
Movement / Style:
Dada
Notable Family Members:
spouse Jean Arp

Sophie Taeuber-Arp (born January 19, 1889, Davos, Switzerland—died January 13, 1943, Zürich) was a Swiss French Dada artist, textile designer, and modern dancer whose multimedia works bridged the gap between fine and applied arts.

After studying textile design in St. Gallen, Switzerland, and in Hamburg, Taeuber-Arp left for Zürich in 1915. That year she met Jean Arp, who became her artistic collaborator and then her husband (1922). Together Taeuber-Arp and Arp created abstract multimedia works that they called Duo-Collages. Those early works were founded on geometry and patterns and were visibly influenced by Taeuber-Arp’s experience with textile design. Starting in 1916 she taught textile design at Zürich’s School of Arts and Crafts, a position she held through at least 1928. In 1916 she also immersed herself in the Dada movement, which had taken hold of the avant-garde artists of Zürich. That year she also began to study modern dance with choreographer Rudolf Laban. She became an accomplished dancer and performed, sometimes with German dancer Mary Wigman, at the Cabaret Voltaire, a central meeting place of the Dadaists.

In addition to dancing, Taeuber-Arp’s contribution to the Dada genre included a series of wooden heads (“Dada heads”), which she fashioned out of hat stands and on which she painted stylized geometric faces, including one of Jean (Untitled [Dada Head, Portrait of Hans Arp], 1918). Also with wood she created marionettes for a 1918 production of Carlo Gozzi’s 1762 fairy tale The King Stag.

In 1926 Taeuber-Arp and Arp, now married, moved to Strasbourg, France, and became French citizens. There, along with Arp and Dutch De Stijl artist Theo van Doesburg, Taeuber-Arp worked on a commission to repurpose a mid-18th-century building into what would become the Café de l’Aubette, a restaurant with a dance hall and a theatre. The trio worked on the project through 1928. Unfortunately, the new design was not well received by the residents of Strasbourg, and changes were made to the interior soon after its completion. What remained of their original design was later destroyed by the Nazis.

Taeuber-Arp and her husband moved to Paris in 1928, where they stayed until 1940. During those years she exhibited her work—including several times with the Surrealists in the mid- to late 1930s. She and Arp also joined artist groups Cercle et Carré (1930) and Abstraction-Création (1931–34). In 1937 she helped launch and became editor of an art journal titled Plastique, which was published until 1939. She created polychrome and monochrome wooden reliefs in the 1930s, which integrated biomorphic with geometric forms, and during that period and into the 1940s she also produced a series of “line” pictures, another manifestation of her interest in geometric abstraction. In 1940, when the Nazis invaded, she and her husband fled Paris, and in 1942 they returned to Zürich. She died in 1943 from accidental carbon monoxide poisoning.

Naomi Blumberg

abstract art

Also known as: nonfigurative art, nonobjective art, nonrepresentational art
Also called:
nonobjective art or nonrepresentational art

abstract art, painting, sculpture, or graphic art in which the portrayal of things from the visible world plays little or no part. All art consists largely of elements that can be called abstract—elements of form, color, line, tone, and texture. Prior to the 20th century these abstract elements were employed by artists to describe, illustrate, or reproduce the world of nature and of human civilization—and exposition dominated over expressive function.

Abstract art in its strictest sense has its origins in the 19th century. The period characterized by so vast a body of elaborately representational art produced for the sake of illustrating anecdote also produced a number of painters who examined the mechanism of light and visual perception. The period of Romanticism had put forward ideas about art that denied classicism’s emphasis on imitation and idealization and had instead stressed the role of imagination and of the unconscious as the essential creative factors. Gradually many painters of this period began to accept the new freedom and the new responsibilities implied in the coalescence of these attitudes. Maurice Denis’s statement of 1890, “It should be remembered that a picture—before being a war-horse, a nude, or an anecdote of some sort—is essentially a flat surface covered with colors assembled in a certain order,” summarizes the feeling among the Symbolist and Post-Impressionist artists of his time.

All the major movements of the first two decades of the 20th century, including Fauvism, Expressionism, Cubism, and Futurism, in some way emphasized the gap between art and natural appearances.

St. Andrew, wall painting in the presbytery of Santa Maria Antiqua, Rome, 705–707.
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Western painting: The 20th century

There is, however, a deep distinction between abstracting from appearances, even if to the point of unrecognizability, and making works of art out of forms not drawn from the visible world. During the four or five years preceding World War I, such artists as Robert Delaunay, Wassily Kandinsky, Kazimir Malevich, and Vladimir Tatlin turned to fundamentally abstract art. (Kandinsky was traditionally regarded as having been the first modern artist to paint purely abstract pictures containing no recognizable objects, in 1910–11. That narrative, however, was later questioned, especially in the 21st century with the renewed interest in Swedish artist Hilma af Klint. She painted her first abstract work in 1906 but with a different goal than achieving pure abstraction.) The majority of even the progressive artists regarded the abandonment of every degree of representation with disfavor, however. During World War I the emergence of the de Stijl group in the Netherlands and of the Dada group in Zürich further widened the spectrum of abstract art.

Abstract art did not flourish between World Wars I and II. Beset by totalitarian politics and by art movements placing renewed emphasis on imagery, such as Surrealism and socially critical Realism, it received little notice. But after World War II an energetic American school of abstract painting called Abstract Expressionism emerged and had wide influence. Beginning in the 1950s abstract art was an accepted and widely practiced approach within European and American painting and sculpture. Abstract art puzzled and indeed confused many people, but for those who accepted its nonreferential language there is no doubt as to its value and achievements. See also modern art.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Alicja Zelazko.