- https://www.mondriaanhuis.nl/en/do-mondriaan/on-view/fiks-quest-for-abstraction-1
- Fiks' quest for abstraction
- 2023-09-23T00:00:00+02:00
- 2024-01-21T23:59:59+01:00
- Alongside Piet Mondrian, Albert Fiks is one of the few modernists Amersfoort has produced. Guest curator Onno Maurer portrays the artistic quest of the painter, who died young. On view from 23 September.
Amersfoort painter Albert Fiks (1908-1945) reached his artistic peak in the period 1930-1940 with his cubist and abstract still lifes. Unfortunately, the painter did not grow old. He died of blood poisoning at the age of thirty-seven. Nevertheless, Fiks left behind a versatile oeuvre. From this, guest curator and Fiks expert Onno Maurer selected works that depict the painter's search for his own style. Together with Renske van der Linde - Beins, Maurer published the monograph Albert Fiks - The rediscovery of a versatile talent in 2007.
Painter in Amersfoort
Albert Fiks was born on 14 May 1908 in Elberfeld, Germany, the son of a Dutch father and a German mother. At the age of two, after the death of his father, he entered a foster family in Amersfoort. His talent for drawing and painting became apparent early on.
At eighteen, Albert Fiks became a member of the Amersfoort Art Circle and got to know painters Jacob Nieweg, Willem van Dam and Jo Koster, among others. They encouraged him to further develop his talent. The Kunstkring also gave him the opportunity to exhibit.
Fiks moved from Amersfoort to 't Gooi (Blaricum and Laren). There he met his later wife Josephine ('Fientje') Danko, scion of an art-loving family. In Laren, the painter came into contact with modernism, which greatly influenced the stylistic development of his work. He became friends with Dirk Koning and Lou Loeber. He also got in touch with Bart van der Leck in Laren and was drawn to the work of Vilmos Huszár and Piet Mondrian. He was deeply impressed by the modern painterly innovations of these artists and now started looking for simplification of his subjects himself. Albert Fiks' work never became completely abstract, but stylisation and abstraction came to characterise his painting and drawing.