Lucebert (Dutch:[ˈlucəbɛrt];[1]Lubertus Jacobus Swaanswijk; 15 September 1924– 10 May 1994) was a Dutch artist who first became known as the poet of the COBRA movement.
Dutch painter
Lucebert
Lucebert (1987)
Born
Lubertus Jacobus Swaanswijk
(1924-09-15)15 September 1924
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Died
10 May 1994(1994-05-10) (aged69)
Alkmaar, Netherlands
Nationality
Dutch
Knownfor
Poetry, painting
Movement
COBRA
He was born in Amsterdam in 1924. He entered the Institute for Arts and Crafts in 1938 and took part in the first exhibition of the COBRA group at the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam in 1949.
Biography
Lucebert's talent was discovered when he started working for his father after school. After half a year of art school, he chose to be homeless between 1938 and 1947. In 1947, a Franciscan convent offered him a roof over his head, in exchange for a huge mural painting. Because the nuns could not appreciate his work, they had it entirely painted over with white paint.
He belonged to the Dutch literary movement of De Vijftigers, which was greatly influenced by the European avant-garde movement COBRA. Lucebert's early work especially shows this influence, and his art in general reflects a rather pessimistic outlook on life.
His strong personality appealed to many. As a poet he laid foundation for revolutionary innovation in Dutch poetry.
Most of his poems were collected in Gedichten 1948–1965. After this period of composing poetry, he worked primarily in the visual arts known as figurative-expressionist from the 1960s. His work is being translated to English on collected works.[2]
Lucebert's sentence "Alles van waarde is weerloos" ("All things of value are helpless") on a building in Rotterdam
Well known is his line "Alles van waarde is weerloos" from the poem De zeer oude zingt ("The very old one sings"). The adjective "weerloos" means "defenseless", "unable to defend oneself", so the meaning is "All things of value are defenseless". This line was put on top of the office building of an insurance company in Rotterdam (near the Blaak station) in neon letters, including his name, sometime in the 1980s or earlier. It wasn't the first but is certainly the most prominent commercial use of the line; today three more buildings in the area display it on their walls. Similarly, written on the city's central library just across the street is "Heel de wereld is mijn vaderland – Erasmus", "All the world is my fatherland – Erasmus".
Lucebert died on 10 May 1994 in Alkmaar, Netherlands.
Lucebert was also a noted anti-apartheid activist.[3]
Exhibitions
1949 – International Exhibition of Experimental Art, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1959 – Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1961 – Stedelijk van Abbe-Museum, Eindhoven, Netherlands
1963 – Staedtlische Kunstgalerie, Bochum, Germany
1963 – Marlborough New London Gallery, London
1964 – Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam; Kunsthalle Baden-Baden
1964 – Documenta 111, Kassel, Germany
1969 – Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
1969 – Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland – with Karel Appel and Tajiri
1977 – Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands
1982 – Kunsthalle, Mannheim, Germany
1983 – Kunstverein Hochrhein, Bad Säckingen, Germany
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