On March 18, in celebration of Women’s History Month, the Parrish At Museum and Hamptons Doc Fest will present a screening of “Beyond the Visible: Hilma af Klint,” a documentary directed by Halina Dryschka, on the life and craft of af Klint (Sweden, 1862–1944) — the visionary female artist who worked in abstraction in the early 1900s, before the term existed.
An all-but-forgotten figure in art historical discourse, af Klint was recently rediscovered and celebrated in a groundbreaking retrospective of her work at the Guggenheim Museum in 2018. The screening, a part of the Museum’s Artist’s Lens series, will be followed by an in-person conversation with artists Dannielle Tegeder and Sharmistha Ray who co-founded Hilma’s Ghost — a feminist artist collective that address art-historical gaps by cultivating a global network of women, nonbinary, and trans practitioners whose work references spirituality. The film and talk will take place in the theater at the Museum; the talk will also be livestreamed.
Between 1906 and 1915, af Klint created colorful, sensual paintings of uncommonly large-scale, inspired by spiritualism, science, and nature. This first major group of predominantly non-objective work was inspired in part by af Klint’s practice as a medium and reflect an effort to articulate mystical views of reality. Convinced that the world was not yet ready for her forward-thinking work, she rarely exhibited and stipulated that it not be shown for 20 years following her death. As a result of this, and the zeitgeist of society and the artworld in the early 20th century, af Klint’s paintings and works on paper went largely unseen until her rediscovery in 1986. More recently, her work gained relevance as a result of the renewed interest in spiritualism during the pandemic.
“Beyond the Visible” — the first and only documentary on af Klint and Dyrschka’s first full length film — delves into af Klint’s creative process as well as the extenuating circumstances that led her being mischaracterized and erased in the art world. Interviews with the artist’s family, friends, artists, historians, and collectors share the untold stories of a heroine whose pursuit of art and questions of life transcend the visible.
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