Wolfgang Kermer


Wolfgang Kermer is a German art historian, artist, art pedagogue, author, editor, organizer of exhibitions and professor. From 1971 to 1984 he was Rector of the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart. His focus is the history of Visual arts education and the art of Willi Baumeister.

Biography

Life and education

Born as the son of an austrian Kapellmeister, he was educated at the Staatliches Realgymnasium Neunkirchen, where he received his abitur in 1956. After this, he studied visual arts education at the Staatliche Schule für Kunst und Handwerk Saarbrücken and at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart; art history, philosophy, educational sciences, prehistory and cultural geography at the universities of Saarbrücken, Stuttgart and Tübingen. In 1959 he stayed in Paris for a period of time and studied as a scholarship holder of the French government at the École du Louvre. After the state examination 1961 in Stuttgart he was awarded in 1966 the title PhD by University of Tübingen magna cum laude with the dissertation Studien zum Diptychon in der sakralen Malerei; von den Anfängen bis zur Mitte des sechzehnten Jahrhunderts. Mit einem Katalog. From 1961 to 1962 he was at the Technische Hochschule Stuttgart artistic and research assistant.

Career

Teaching art history since 1966, he worked more than thirty years at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart, from 1972 as professor and chair holder. Since 1969 he has been active in university politics as an elected member of the Academy Senate and as a member of various university bodies in Baden-Württemberg. In order to avoid conflicts of interest, he gave up his work as chairman of the art educators association Württemberg after two years in 1972 after being elected rector of the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart in 1971. 1973, 1976 and 1980 confirmed by the university committees in this position, he remained rector of this institution until 1984, where he made profound content and organizational reforms after the students protests in the late sixties. The legal status of the academy has been clarified, the inner structure was reorganized, diploma degrees were introduced for all programs and new regulations for admission to studies were created. New types of support for students have been introduced. Kermer promoted international exchanges with artists and art educational institutions in Australia, Austria and South Korea. His special attention was on previously neglected public relations. He founded and edited the series of publications , and and has also written articles and books on modern artists and art education. He has been the curator of numerous exhibitions and high school events and founded in 1975 the Academy Collection. One of the highlights was the exhibition of austrian artist Walter Pichler in 1981 with drawings and plans for his architectural projects. On the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart after World War II, Wolfgang Kermer has organized the large-scale exhibition "Zwischen Buch-Kunst und Buch-Design: Buchgestalter der Akademie und ehemaligen Kunstgewerbeschule in Stuttgart" which was shown in 1996 at the State Library of Württemberg in Stuttgart and in 1997 at the Klingspor Museum in Offenbach am Main. Kermer's scholarly work has been devoted since the 1970s to the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart and world-famous professors like Bernhard Pankok, Adolf Hölzel, Willi Baumeister,, Alfred Hrdlicka. One of his specialties is the art and art education of Willi Baumeister: Kermer organized in 1989 the first retrospective of his work as typographer. Baumeister's lithographs printed from Erich Mönch at the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart he exhibited in 1975, and in 1979 the exhibition "Hommage à Baumeister" has shown the artistic creations from twelve of his most famous students. His art theory and pedagogic views he devoted publications in 1971 and 1992. Some of Baumeister's writings Kermer reedited in 1999 and 2006.
Guest events organized by Wolfgang Kermer in the 1980s with artists such as Roland Goeschl, Richard Hamilton, Oswald Oberhuber, Walter Pichler and Arnulf Rainer as well as co-operative exhibitions such as ″Art Education in Korea: Studies from the College of Fine Arts Seoul National University″, ″Anton Kolig″, ″The young Kokoschka″ and ″Brancusi Photographe″ activated the public relations work of the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart, a special concern Kermers since the beginning of his rectorate.
In 1987 Wolfgang Kermer discovered the forgotten artistic heritage of the Stuttgart Jewish painter, who was murdered in the Holocaust. He succeeded in preventing an unworthy dissolution of the artistic estate. In 2016, he donated two paintings by the artist, which he had acquired in art galleries, to the Museum Spendhaus at Reutlingen, the native town of Alice Haarburger.
As far as his own artistic work is concerned, Kermer has exhibited his abstract paintings, drawings, etchings and photographs in more than thirty solo and group exhibitions in Germany since 1954, in France since 2003
Also active as art collector, Wolfgang Kermer donated his private collections of international Studio glass, modern French ceramics as well as contemporary paintings, graphics und sculptures to museums in Frauenau, Neunkirchen and Sarreguemines. On the occasion of his seventieth birthday in 2005, he gave his hometown Neunkirchen under the title ″Stuttgarter Begegnungen″, among others, works by Erwin Eisch, Alfred Hrdlicka, Markus Lüpertz, Chris Newman, Arnulf Rainer, Michael Sandle, Gustav Seitz, K.R.H. Sonderborg, Niklaus Troxler, Micha Ullman, Jörg F Zimmermann. The Donation Wolfgang Kermer to the Frauenau Glass Museum in 1982 includes works by numerous major studio glass artists and glass designers, including Sergio Asti, Erwin Eisch, Claire Falkenstein, Kaj Franck, Kyohei Fujita, Sam Herman, Harvey Littleton, Marvin Lipofsky, Benny Motzfeldt, Edvin Öhrström, Sybren Valkema, Paolo Venini, Wilhelm Wagenfeld, Tapio Wirkkala, Ann Wolff, Jörg F Zimmermann. In 2017, he presented the Frauenau Glass Museum with an extensive collection of hand-blown glasses, ″Homage to the unknown glassblower″ he called his donation, typical examples of the production of long-gone glassworks in eastern France. Together with his wife, he donated to the city of Sarreguemines in 2018 their collection of works by important French ceramists from the period 1970–2000.
Wolfgang Kermer is married to French artist and lives now in Kusel and Cendrecourt after living in Neunkirchen, Stuttgart, Renningen, Rutesheim and Schillersdorf.

Honors

In 1984 Wolfgang Kermer was awarded the Cross of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany and in 2006 he became Honorary Senator of the State Academy of Fine Arts Stuttgart.

Published works

Author

Solo exhibitions