917 979-2788 vanigreene@mac.com

TITLE:  still life

MEDIUM: oil on wood

CREATED: 1940

SIGNED: yes

SIZE:  11″ x 23″

 

TITLE:  none 

MEDIUM: gouache on paper

CREATED: 1940

SIGNED: yes

SIZE:  14.5″ x 19.5″

TITLE:  none 

MEDIUM: pencil on paper

CREATED: 1946

SIGNED: yes

SIZE:  15″ x 10″

 

TITLE:  garden of eden

MEDIUM: ink on paper

CREATED: 

SIGNED: yes

SIZE:  6.5″ x 8.25″ 

 

Josef Scharl (1896 – 1954)

Josef Scharl was born in Munich and began an education as a decoration painter in 1910 at
the Malerschule in Munich. He entered the war service in 1915 and could only continue his
artistic education after the war was over. He went to the academy in Munich and studied
under Heinrich von Zügel und Angelo Jank but left the academy early again. He was a member
of the Munich Secession from 1925 to 1928. A scholarship enabled him a longer stay in
Paris where he got to know late Impressionism.

Back in Germany, he was confronted with the National Socialists’ culture politics; his financial situation worsened and finally he was forbidden to paint. Nonetheless, the gallery Neumann-Nierendorf held a solo exhibition of his works in 1933 and another one in 1935 – while in the same year some of his paintings were shown in the exhibition ‘Entartete Kunst’ (‘degenerate art’) in Nuremberg. When he was invited to take part in an international exhibition in the MOMA in New York together with Heckel, Beckmann, Hofer and Scholz, Scharl’s wish to emigrate in the US was reinforced and he did so in 1938.

In New York he was supported by Nierendorf and also by Albert Einstein with whom he was on
friendly terms. Due to this early emigration, Scharl is less known today in Germany than some
of his fellow expressionists. Thanks to the tireless effort of the Nierendorf Gallery, this has
began to change during the last years. Works by Josef Scharl are held by the collections of
the City Gallery Munich, the National Gallery Munich, the City Gallery Nuremberg and at the
German Academy Rome.