Otto Klar
Otto Klar was born in Vienna, Austria in 1908. He studied at the Vienna Academy of Arts. Klar exhibited in Vienna, Munich and Berlin before coming to South Africa in 1939. Klar settled in Pretoria, where he painted and taught art. Amongst his students was Alice Goldin. He was interested in local landscape and Bantu figure subjects. In 1962 Otto Klar received an Honorary Professorship conferred on him by the President of Austria.
Otto Klar was a painter of confirmed ability, but one who was vacillated in his commitment to aesthetic principles. Soon after his arrival in South Africa he established a reputation by demonstrating command of the oil techniques and skill in descriptive landscape, which were well received.
Otto Klar was described as "A painter of energy and strength, he could hurl thunderbolts across his canvasses." His palette – black, white, golds, oranges and reds, suggest furnaces and molten metal. His knowledgeable brush holds promise of powerful constructions, meteoric movement and dynamic clash of forces. Yet, repeatedly a powerful initial composition is reduced to banality by the imposition of forced literary images. He did not sustain his movement towards abstraction and retreated back to descriptive figuration in the mid 1960s that has remained popular.
After Otto Klar passed away in 1994, his stepson Klaus H. Fischer inherited the personal collection of works from the Estate, which were offered in Port Elizabeth on 29th September 2000, inter alia.
Exhibitions:
Participated in numerous group exhibitions held throughout Europe and in SA
held several solo exhibitions in SA
1952 Van Riebeeck Tercentenary Exhibition
1960 Quadrennial Exhibition
1964 Milan, Italy, solo exhibition
1966 Republic Festival exhibition
Otto Klar was a painter of confirmed ability, but one who was vacillated in his commitment to aesthetic principles. Soon after his arrival in South Africa he established a reputation by demonstrating command of the oil techniques and skill in descriptive landscape, which were well received.
Otto Klar was described as "A painter of energy and strength, he could hurl thunderbolts across his canvasses." His palette – black, white, golds, oranges and reds, suggest furnaces and molten metal. His knowledgeable brush holds promise of powerful constructions, meteoric movement and dynamic clash of forces. Yet, repeatedly a powerful initial composition is reduced to banality by the imposition of forced literary images. He did not sustain his movement towards abstraction and retreated back to descriptive figuration in the mid 1960s that has remained popular.
After Otto Klar passed away in 1994, his stepson Klaus H. Fischer inherited the personal collection of works from the Estate, which were offered in Port Elizabeth on 29th September 2000, inter alia.
Exhibitions:
Participated in numerous group exhibitions held throughout Europe and in SA
held several solo exhibitions in SA
1952 Van Riebeeck Tercentenary Exhibition
1960 Quadrennial Exhibition
1964 Milan, Italy, solo exhibition
1966 Republic Festival exhibition