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November Group (German)

The November Group (German: Novembergruppe) was a group of German expressionist artists and architects. Formed on 3 December 1918, they took their name from the month of the German Revolution.[1]

The group was led by Max Pechstein and César Klein. Linked less by their styles of art than by shared socialist values, the group campaigned for radical artists to have a greater say in such issues as the organisation of art schools, and new laws around the arts. The group merged in December 1918 with Arbeitsrat für Kunst (Workers Council of the arts – or 'The Art Soviet').

History of the artist group

After its founding meeting on 3 December 1918 in Berlin, the Novembergruppe published an appeal in the Expressionist journal with the title Die schöne Rarität, which was also sent out as a circular letter to artists throughout Germany on 13 December 1918, soliciting further members.[2]

The association's first office was located at 113 Potsdamer Strasse in Berlin (destroyed during the Second World War, level with today's No. 81). The house belonged to the art dealer and publisher Wolfgang Gurlitt. The artists and founding members César Klein and Max Pechstein in particular had been associated with the art dealer for some time.[3]

In the first few months, 170 artists joined the newly founded Novembergruppe: 49 of them alone came from the editorial environment of Herwarth Walden's magazine Sturm. In the beginning, the artists' group was joined by Italian Futurists, important DADA artists as well as important Bauhaus members, some of whom belonged to the older Werkbund.[4]

Weimar Republic

 
Preparation for the opening of the Große Berliner Kunstausstellung, June 1924

The artists of the November group described themselves as radical and revolutionary. Their work, like that of the similar Arbeitsrat für Kunst (Working Council for Art), aimed to support a socialist revolution in Germany. A key objective of the group was the union of art and the people. Furthermore, the group tried to influence public and cultural aspects of society.

In order to be entered in the register of associations, the association formulated the “representation and promotion of its artistic interests” as the purpose of its association in its statutes and gave itself an organisational form that endured with slight modifications in the following years. The executive committee consisted of a chairman, a secretary and a treasurer.[5] The association had itself entered in the Berlin register of associations on 20 August 1920.[5]

Characteristic of the artists of the November Group was a style syncretism that was often referred to as Cubofutoexpressionism. The neologism refers to Cubism, Futurism and Expressionism. The November Group was known for the diversity of its styles and disciplines, but is also criticised for this lack of uniformity and the resulting difficulty in classifying them stylistically. This diversity ranged from Expressionism and Cubism to Constructivism and represented “a middle ground between visionary and lyrical expressivity, constructive pictorial organisation and a sensitive and milieu-oriented objectivity.”[6]

From July to December 1920, the Novembergruppe published six issues of the journal Der Kunsttopf. The texts reflected the liberal attitude of the authors, who consisted of members of the association as well as guests. The numerous illustrations documented the heterogeneous stylistic spectrum represented by the Novembergruppe. Recurring themes were the social responsibility of art and the opening of disciplines to collaborative work.[7]

At the beginning of 1921, Raoul Hausmann attempted to take a leading role in the November Group.[8] He drafted a sketch for the redesign of the Kunstopf in January. Together with Hans Siebert von Heister, Hausmann edited a new journal entitled NG (publication of the November Group), whose cover was designed by the artist Hannah Höch. The project was discontinued after only one issue.[9]

With the dissolution of the Arbeitsrat für Kunst in spring 1921, many architects who had hitherto been organised in this association joined the November Group. In the same year,[citation needed] artists from the left wing of the November Group called for an end to the “bourgeois development” of the artists. The declaration was signed by Otto Dix, George Grosz, Raoul Hausmann, John Heartfield, Hannah Höch, Rudolf Schlichter and Georg Scholz.

On 20 January 1922, the general assembly of the Novembergruppe decided to admit writers and sound artists.[5] In 1922, the decentralised November Group restructured away from a conglomeration of local groups and became part of the “Cartel of advanced artistic groups in Germany” (in German: Kartell fortschrittlicher Künstlergruppen in Deutschland).[10]

As well as painters, there were many artists from other disciplines such as architecture and music. The musicians became one of the driving forces under their leader Max Butting (later replaced by Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt).

At the end of 1924, Ludwig Mies van der Rohe took over the chairmanship of the association.[11] In January 1925, the latter proposed that the management of the group must be professionalised in commercial terms. Hugo Graetz then became managing director and the association's office was moved to his gallery (Kunsthandlung Hugo Graetz), which was located at Achenbachstraße 21 (at the level of today's Lietzenburger Straße 33) in Berlin-Schöneberg.[12]

On 3 and 10 May 1925, the November Group, in cooperation with the cultural department of UFA, organised the matinée Der absolute Film (The Absolute Film) at the Ufa-Palast on Kurfürstendamm in Berlin. Abstract and surrealist avant-garde films by German and French artists, including Ludwig Hirschfeld-Mack and Francis Picabia, were presented.[13] The matinee is considered to be the first public screening of abstract film in Germany and at the same time the culmination of experiments in absolute film.[5] The artists were convinced that the experience of the accelerated movement of the technical age called for a new art, and they sought new, innovative forms of representation through film in order to create a genuine art of movement. The Berlin press strongly condemned the screening.[5]

At the beginning of 1927, all the architects except Alfred Gellhorn left the November Group and tried to represent their interests in the architects' association Der Ring (The Ring). Several visual artists and musicians also left the Novembergruppe in 1927. The loss of so many prominent comrades-in-arms plunged the association, which from this point on consisted of some 72 permanent members, into a serious crisis.[5]

The group parted company with its managing director Hugo Graetz in the spring of 1930 and moved its office to the rooms of the gallery Die Kunststube, which was located at Königin-Augusta-Straße 22 in Berlin (today Reichpietschufer, at the height of house number 48). Members had already presented their works here on several occasions, including Otto Möller and Arthur Segal. The management of the art shop was in the hands of Ludwig Hermann Schütze and Charlotte Luke.[14]

The November Group held regular art festivals, costume parties, studio visits as well as literary and musical events.

National Socialism

After the National Socialists came to power, all artists' and art associations were brought into line in the spring of 1933. This is effectively equivalent to an exhibition ban for the Novembergruppe.[4] Like all avant-garde associations, the Novembergruppe was no longer permitted to participate in public exhibitions. The association was officially deprived of its legal capacity on 24 July 1935.[15] Whether the dissolution of the Novembergruppe was requested or enforced by the Nazis themselves cannot be said with certainty due to the patchy nature of the files.[16]

The November Group was called the Red November Group[17] by the National Socialists. Because of their commitment to abstraction and atonality, their members were reviled as Bolshevik. In the diatribe Säuberung des Kunsttempels (The Cleaning of the Temple of Art) by Wolfgang Willrich, 174 former members and guests of the association were listed by name and publicly pilloried as “degenerate”. Like many avant-garde artists, former members of the Novembergruppe were dismissed from public office.[16] According to Oskar Schlemmer, the dissolution of the artists' group began as early as 1932.

Exhibitions

Exhibitions were regularly organised as the most important means of self-expression. Every year, the members of the artists' group were represented at the Große Berliner Kunstausstellung (Great Berlin Art Exhibition) with their own room. In addition, they exhibited together with the artists of their local groups scattered throughout the republic of the Weimar Germany.[18]

The Novembergruppe invited important international artists or representatives of artist groups to its exhibitions. Thus in 1919 Marc Chagall, in 1920 Georges Braque, Fernand Léger and Marie Laurencin, in 1922 Henryk Berlewi and in 1923 El Lissitzky (with his legendary Proun Room) were represented in the Novembergruppe's section at the Große Berliner Kunstausstellung. Also in 1923, Ivan Puni and László Péri were among the exhibitors.

In the spring of 1922, the “Cartel of advanced artistic groups in Germany” (in German: Kartell fortschrittlicher Künstlergruppen in Deutschland), of which the November Group was a member, participated unitedly in the First International Art Exhibition in the rooms of the Düsseldorf department stores' Leonhard Tietz.

One of the most important international exhibition collaborations was a graphics exhibition held in collaboration with the Italian Futurists at the Casa d'Arte in Rome from 23 October to the end of November 1920, arranged by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti and Novembergruppe member Enrico Prampolini.[19]

In 1921, the association was represented at the 16th Jury-Free Art Exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam from 5 February to 6 March, at the invitation of the Dutch artists' group De Onafhankelijken.[20]

In October 1924, the First General German Art Exhibition in Soviet Russia took place in Moscow, which subsequently travelled to Leningrad (now Saint-Petersburg) and Saratov. Thirteen German artists' associations participated, with the November Group being the most strongly represented group with 24 artists.[21] The show became a great success with the Russian public, to whom German art had been largely unknown until then.[22]

In 1925, a cohesive group of Prague architects participated in the November Group's exhibition at the Große Berliner Kunstausstellung. In 1926, more than 30 architects from the November Group participated in the Berlin Baukunst exhibition. The Kazimir Malevich Show in 1927, organised by the November Group, was one of the highlights of its exhibition history.

In addition, the association repeatedly exhibited in local galleries in Berlin: for example, in April/May 1920, an exhibition was held at the Gurlitt Gallery.[23] This was followed by a smaller Novembergruppe exhibition from 4 to 30 November 1920 at the book and art antiquarian shop Fraenkel & Co (Josef Altmann). Josef Altmann, who had run the small gallery since 1914, can be considered the first art dealer of the Novembergruppe, who also represented individual members.[12] Altmann's gallery again held a group exhibition from 1 to 30 November 1921.

Members

Founding members

The group was initially founded mainly by painters Max Pechstein, Georg Tappert, César Klein, Moriz Melzer and Heinrich Richter. At the first meeting on 3 December 1918 they were joined by Karl Jakob Hirsch, Bernhard Hasler, Richard Janthur, Rudolf Bauer, Bruno Krauskopf, Otto Freundlich, Wilhelm Schmid, the sculptor Rudolf Belling and the architect Erich Mendelsohn. From this group the first working committee were drawn.

Women in the November Group

As in other revolutionary artists' associations, there were only a few women on the membership list of the Novembergruppe. Of the 49 founding members from the Sturm circle, Hilla Rebay was only one woman, although a large number of women were active in the Sturm circle. This was different at exhibitions of the November Group. Here, several women participated in exhibitions, in addition to Hannah Höch and Marie Laurencin, for example, Emy Roeder and Emmy Klinker.[24]

List of members

A definitive list of all the members of the group is difficult to establish due to a lack of early documentation. According to research conducted by the Berlinische Galerie as part of the exhibition project Freedom. The art of the Novembergruppe 1918–1935 (2018), three lists of members have survived. Georg Tappert compiled a handwritten list of members in 1918, which is now in the estate of Walter Gropius in the Bauhaus Archive Berlin.[25] A second list with the membership of the Novembergruppe was printed in the catalogue of 1925.[26] A third list of members from 1930 was compiled by the Novembergruppe's managing director, Hugo Graetz, a copy of which is now in the Archive of the Academy of Arts in Berlin.[27]

Among the mostly over 120 members were architects, painters, musicians and art theorists. The following is a listing of the members alphabetically by the first letter of the surname:

A

B

C

D

E

F

G

H

I

J

K

L

M

N

  • Otto Nagel (noted on list from 1930)[27]
  • Ernest Neuschul [de] (noted on list from 1930)[27]

O

P

R

S

T

U

  • Rudolf Utzinger (noted on list from 1925)[26]

V

W

Z

  • Willy Zierath (noted on list from 1918)[25]

References

  1. ^ Novembergruppe. "Zehn Jahre Novembergruppe (Ten Years of the November Group), special issue". Kunst der Zeit. Journal for Art and Literature (in German). Will Grohmann. 3 (No. 1-3): 10.
  2. ^ Working Council of the November Group, "Aufruf", in: Die schöne Rarität, vol. 2, 1918, no. 9, advertising section, unpaginated; November Group, circular letter, 13 December 1918, in: Zehn Jahre Novembergruppe, special issue Kunst der Zeit. Zeitschrift für Kunst und Literatur, Volume 3, 1928, Nos. 1-3.
  3. ^ Letter from Heinrich Campendonk to Walter Dexel, 16 December 1918, Museum Penzberg, Campendonk Collection, letter 192.
  4. ^ a b Kliemann, Helga (1969). Die Novembergruppe. Bildende Kunst in Berlin. Berlin: Mann.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Freiheit - die Kunst der Novembergruppe 1918-1935. Thomas Köhler, Ralf Burmeister, Janina Nentwig, Prestel Verlag. München. 2018. ISBN 978-3-7913-5780-5. OCLC 1077767518.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  6. ^ Geschichte der deutschen Kunst [...] 1918 - 1945 / hrsg. von Harald Olbrich (in German). Harald Olbrich (1. Aufl ed.). Leipzig. 1990. p. 279. ISBN 978-3-363-00462-5. OCLC 260218539.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. ^ Alfred Gellhorn et al.: Die Richtung, in: Der Kunsttopf, vol. 1, 1920, No. 3.
  8. ^ Janina Nentwig: Art and Anti-Art in Berlin Around 1920. Dada and the Novembergruppe, in: Olaf Peters (ed.): Berlin Metropolis 1918-1933 (Ausst.-Kat. New York, Neue Galerie), Munich/London/New York 2015, pp. 36-57.
  9. ^ Raoul Hausmann: Der Kunsttopf, in: Berlinische Galerie 1995, 2nd Dept, 21.54, p. 42 f.
  10. ^ Konstruktivistische, internationale, schöpferische Arbeitsgemeinschaft, 1922-1927 : Utopien für eine europäische Kultur (in German). Bernd Finkeldey, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Staatliche Galerie Moritzburg. Stuttgart: G. Hatje. 1992. pp. 17–22. ISBN 3-7757-0376-4. OCLC 27678906.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  11. ^ Letter from the November Group (Working Committee) to Members, 29 November 1924, Library of Congress, Washington D.C., Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Papers, MSS32847, Correspondence, Box 2.
  12. ^ a b Werner J. Schweiger: Fraenkel & Co. (Josef Altmann) [entry for planned publication Lexikon des Kunsthandels der Moderne im deutschsprachigen Raum 1905-1937], Berlinische Galerie, Kunstarchiv Schweiger, BG-WJS-M-1,10
  13. ^ Wilmesmeier, Holger, Deutsche Avantgarde und Film. The Filmatinee "The Absolute Film" 3 and 10 May 1925, Münster 1994.
  14. ^ Werner J. Schweiger: Kunststube G.m.b.H. (entry for planned publication Lexikon des Kunsthandels der Moderne im deutschsprachigen Raum 1905-1937), Berlinische Galerie, Kunstarchiv Schweiger, BG-WJS-M-1,39.
  15. ^ Franz Schulz: Kunst, Bürger, Staat, (in German) in: Das Forum, vol. 4/2, no 9, June 1920, pp. 655–660.
  16. ^ a b Georg Tappert - deutscher Expressionist : [Ausstellungen: Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen, Schloß Gottorf, Schleswig, 20. März bis 12. Juni 2005 ; Germanisches Nationalmuseum, Nürnberg, 21. Juli bis 23. Oktober 2005] (in German). Georg Tappert, Gesa Bartholomeyczik, Irmtraud von Andrian-Werburg, Anke Daemgen, Stiftung Schleswig-Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloss Gottorf, Germanisches Nationalmuseum. Nürnberg: Verl. des Germanischen Nationalmuseums. 2005. ISBN 3-936688-07-9. OCLC 314798794.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  17. ^ Willrich, Wolfgang (1938). Säuberung des Kunsttempels: Eine kunstpolit. Kampfschrift zur Gesundg dt. Kunst im Geiste nord. Art (in German) (2. Aufl ed.). München Berlin: J. F. Lehmanns Verl.
  18. ^ Wilhelmi, Christoph (1996). Künstlergruppen in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz seit 1900: ein Handbuch (in German). Stuttgart: Hauswedell. pp. 274–284. ISBN 978-3-7762-0400-1.
  19. ^ Finkeldey, Bernd; Stiftung Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, eds. (1992). Konstruktivistische Internationale Schöpferische Arbeitsgemeinschaft, 1922 - 1927, Utopien für eine europäische Kultur: Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, 30. Mai bis 23. August 1992 ; Staatliche Galerie Moritzburg Halle, 13. September bis 15. November 1992 (in German). Düsseldorf: Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen. pp. 23–30. ISBN 978-3-926154-13-2.
  20. ^ German legation in the Netherlands, gez. Rosen, to the Foreign Office, 28 February 1921, Federal Archives, Files of the Reich Art Warden Edwin Redslob, BArch R 32/Bd. 69, p. 51 f.
  21. ^ "Erste Allgemeine Deutsche Kunstausstellung. Moskau-Leningrad. [1-я Всеобщая германская художественная выставка. Москва-Ленинград: Межрабпом] - Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek". www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  22. ^ Burmeister, Ralf; Roters, Eberhard, eds. (1995). Hannah Höch, eine Lebenscollage. Bd. 2. Abt. 1. / Mit Texten von Eberhard Roters und Heinz Ohff: 1921 - 1945 / [wiss. Bearb. und Red.: Ralf Burmeister ; Eckhard Fürlus] (in German). Berlin: Berlinische Galerie. ISBN 978-3-7757-0550-9.
  23. ^ Exhibition calendar by Fritz Stuckenberg, undated, Städtische Galerie Delmenhorst, Fritz Stuckenberg Estate
  24. ^ Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, ed. (2015). Sturm-Frauen: Künstlerinnen der Avantgarde in Berlin 1910-1932 ; eine Einführung in die Ausstellung (in German) (neue Ausg ed.). Frankfurt am Main: Schirn Kunsthalle. p. 20. ISBN 978-3-89946-244-9.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb Bauhaus Archive, Walter Gropius estate, GS 2/Mappe 9, 2.5.
  26. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf "Archiv der Deutschen Kunst. Ausstellung Novembergruppe; Malerei, Plastik, Architektur / Gustav Eugen Diehl (Hrsg.). Berlin: K. Ullrich, 1925. - Jg. 1925, H. 3 - Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek". www.deutsche-digitale-bibliothek.de (in German). Retrieved 2023-01-13.
  27. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy Akademie der Künste Berlin, Autograph Collection Fine Arts, BK 1 NG.

Literature

  • Helga Kliemann: Die Novembergruppe. Gebr. Mann, Berlin 1969.
  • Galerie Nierendorf: Künstler der Novembergruppe. Ausstellungskatalog Galerie Nierendorf,Berlin 1985.
  • Galerie Bodo Niemann: Die Novembergruppe. Ausstellungskatalog Galerie Niemann, Berlin 1993. ISBN 3-926298-21-9
  • Will Grohmann (Hrsg.): 10 Jahre Novembergruppe. Sonderheft der Kunst der Zeit. Klinkhardt&Biermann, Berlin 3.1928, 1-3.
  • Paul Bekker: Wesensformen der Musik. Veröffentlichung der Novembergruppe. B. Lachmann, Berlin 1925.
  • Max Butting: Musikgeschichte, die ich miterlebte. Henschel, Berlin 1955.
  • Christoph Wilhelmi: Künstlergruppen in Deutschland, Österreich und der Schweiz seit 1900. Ein Handbuch, Stuttgart 1996
  • Irene Below: Between Africa and Europe in Irma Stern: Expressions of a Journey, Standard Bank Gallery, Johannesburg, 2003

External links

  • Manifesto of the "November Group" translated into Austrian Sign Language by Horst Dittrich dailymotion.com

november, group, german, november, group, german, novembergruppe, group, german, expressionist, artists, architects, formed, december, 1918, they, took, their, name, from, month, german, revolution, group, pechstein, césar, klein, linked, less, their, styles, . The November Group German Novembergruppe was a group of German expressionist artists and architects Formed on 3 December 1918 they took their name from the month of the German Revolution 1 The group was led by Max Pechstein and Cesar Klein Linked less by their styles of art than by shared socialist values the group campaigned for radical artists to have a greater say in such issues as the organisation of art schools and new laws around the arts The group merged in December 1918 with Arbeitsrat fur Kunst Workers Council of the arts or The Art Soviet Contents 1 History of the artist group 1 1 Weimar Republic 1 2 National Socialism 2 Exhibitions 3 Members 3 1 Founding members 3 2 Women in the November Group 3 3 List of members 3 3 1 A 3 3 2 B 3 3 3 C 3 3 4 D 3 3 5 E 3 3 6 F 3 3 7 G 3 3 8 H 3 3 9 I 3 3 10 J 3 3 11 K 3 3 12 L 3 3 13 M 3 3 14 N 3 3 15 O 3 3 16 P 3 3 17 R 3 3 18 S 3 3 19 T 3 3 20 U 3 3 21 V 3 3 22 W 3 3 23 Z 4 References 5 Literature 6 External linksHistory of the artist group EditAfter its founding meeting on 3 December 1918 in Berlin the Novembergruppe published an appeal in the Expressionist journal with the title Die schone Raritat which was also sent out as a circular letter to artists throughout Germany on 13 December 1918 soliciting further members 2 The association s first office was located at 113 Potsdamer Strasse in Berlin destroyed during the Second World War level with today s No 81 The house belonged to the art dealer and publisher Wolfgang Gurlitt The artists and founding members Cesar Klein and Max Pechstein in particular had been associated with the art dealer for some time 3 In the first few months 170 artists joined the newly founded Novembergruppe 49 of them alone came from the editorial environment of Herwarth Walden s magazine Sturm In the beginning the artists group was joined by Italian Futurists important DADA artists as well as important Bauhaus members some of whom belonged to the older Werkbund 4 Weimar Republic Edit Preparation for the opening of the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung June 1924 The artists of the November group described themselves as radical and revolutionary Their work like that of the similar Arbeitsrat fur Kunst Working Council for Art aimed to support a socialist revolution in Germany A key objective of the group was the union of art and the people Furthermore the group tried to influence public and cultural aspects of society In order to be entered in the register of associations the association formulated the representation and promotion of its artistic interests as the purpose of its association in its statutes and gave itself an organisational form that endured with slight modifications in the following years The executive committee consisted of a chairman a secretary and a treasurer 5 The association had itself entered in the Berlin register of associations on 20 August 1920 5 Characteristic of the artists of the November Group was a style syncretism that was often referred to as Cubofutoexpressionism The neologism refers to Cubism Futurism and Expressionism The November Group was known for the diversity of its styles and disciplines but is also criticised for this lack of uniformity and the resulting difficulty in classifying them stylistically This diversity ranged from Expressionism and Cubism to Constructivism and represented a middle ground between visionary and lyrical expressivity constructive pictorial organisation and a sensitive and milieu oriented objectivity 6 From July to December 1920 the Novembergruppe published six issues of the journal Der Kunsttopf The texts reflected the liberal attitude of the authors who consisted of members of the association as well as guests The numerous illustrations documented the heterogeneous stylistic spectrum represented by the Novembergruppe Recurring themes were the social responsibility of art and the opening of disciplines to collaborative work 7 At the beginning of 1921 Raoul Hausmann attempted to take a leading role in the November Group 8 He drafted a sketch for the redesign of the Kunstopf in January Together with Hans Siebert von Heister Hausmann edited a new journal entitled NG publication of the November Group whose cover was designed by the artist Hannah Hoch The project was discontinued after only one issue 9 With the dissolution of the Arbeitsrat fur Kunst in spring 1921 many architects who had hitherto been organised in this association joined the November Group In the same year citation needed artists from the left wing of the November Group called for an end to the bourgeois development of the artists The declaration was signed by Otto Dix George Grosz Raoul Hausmann John Heartfield Hannah Hoch Rudolf Schlichter and Georg Scholz On 20 January 1922 the general assembly of the Novembergruppe decided to admit writers and sound artists 5 In 1922 the decentralised November Group restructured away from a conglomeration of local groups and became part of the Cartel of advanced artistic groups in Germany in German Kartell fortschrittlicher Kunstlergruppen in Deutschland 10 As well as painters there were many artists from other disciplines such as architecture and music The musicians became one of the driving forces under their leader Max Butting later replaced by Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt At the end of 1924 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe took over the chairmanship of the association 11 In January 1925 the latter proposed that the management of the group must be professionalised in commercial terms Hugo Graetz then became managing director and the association s office was moved to his gallery Kunsthandlung Hugo Graetz which was located at Achenbachstrasse 21 at the level of today s Lietzenburger Strasse 33 in Berlin Schoneberg 12 On 3 and 10 May 1925 the November Group in cooperation with the cultural department of UFA organised the matinee Der absolute Film The Absolute Film at the Ufa Palast on Kurfurstendamm in Berlin Abstract and surrealist avant garde films by German and French artists including Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack and Francis Picabia were presented 13 The matinee is considered to be the first public screening of abstract film in Germany and at the same time the culmination of experiments in absolute film 5 The artists were convinced that the experience of the accelerated movement of the technical age called for a new art and they sought new innovative forms of representation through film in order to create a genuine art of movement The Berlin press strongly condemned the screening 5 At the beginning of 1927 all the architects except Alfred Gellhorn left the November Group and tried to represent their interests in the architects association Der Ring The Ring Several visual artists and musicians also left the Novembergruppe in 1927 The loss of so many prominent comrades in arms plunged the association which from this point on consisted of some 72 permanent members into a serious crisis 5 The group parted company with its managing director Hugo Graetz in the spring of 1930 and moved its office to the rooms of the gallery Die Kunststube which was located at Konigin Augusta Strasse 22 in Berlin today Reichpietschufer at the height of house number 48 Members had already presented their works here on several occasions including Otto Moller and Arthur Segal The management of the art shop was in the hands of Ludwig Hermann Schutze and Charlotte Luke 14 The November Group held regular art festivals costume parties studio visits as well as literary and musical events National Socialism Edit After the National Socialists came to power all artists and art associations were brought into line in the spring of 1933 This is effectively equivalent to an exhibition ban for the Novembergruppe 4 Like all avant garde associations the Novembergruppe was no longer permitted to participate in public exhibitions The association was officially deprived of its legal capacity on 24 July 1935 15 Whether the dissolution of the Novembergruppe was requested or enforced by the Nazis themselves cannot be said with certainty due to the patchy nature of the files 16 The November Group was called the Red November Group 17 by the National Socialists Because of their commitment to abstraction and atonality their members were reviled as Bolshevik In the diatribe Sauberung des Kunsttempels The Cleaning of the Temple of Art by Wolfgang Willrich 174 former members and guests of the association were listed by name and publicly pilloried as degenerate Like many avant garde artists former members of the Novembergruppe were dismissed from public office 16 According to Oskar Schlemmer the dissolution of the artists group began as early as 1932 Exhibitions EditExhibitions were regularly organised as the most important means of self expression Every year the members of the artists group were represented at the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung Great Berlin Art Exhibition with their own room In addition they exhibited together with the artists of their local groups scattered throughout the republic of the Weimar Germany 18 The Novembergruppe invited important international artists or representatives of artist groups to its exhibitions Thus in 1919 Marc Chagall in 1920 Georges Braque Fernand Leger and Marie Laurencin in 1922 Henryk Berlewi and in 1923 El Lissitzky with his legendary Proun Room were represented in the Novembergruppe s section at the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung Also in 1923 Ivan Puni and Laszlo Peri were among the exhibitors In the spring of 1922 the Cartel of advanced artistic groups in Germany in German Kartell fortschrittlicher Kunstlergruppen in Deutschland of which the November Group was a member participated unitedly in the First International Art Exhibition in the rooms of the Dusseldorf department stores Leonhard Tietz One of the most important international exhibition collaborations was a graphics exhibition held in collaboration with the Italian Futurists at the Casa d Arte in Rome from 23 October to the end of November 1920 arranged by Filippo Tommaso Marinetti and Novembergruppe member Enrico Prampolini 19 In 1921 the association was represented at the 16th Jury Free Art Exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam from 5 February to 6 March at the invitation of the Dutch artists group De Onafhankelijken 20 In October 1924 the First General German Art Exhibition in Soviet Russia took place in Moscow which subsequently travelled to Leningrad now Saint Petersburg and Saratov Thirteen German artists associations participated with the November Group being the most strongly represented group with 24 artists 21 The show became a great success with the Russian public to whom German art had been largely unknown until then 22 In 1925 a cohesive group of Prague architects participated in the November Group s exhibition at the Grosse Berliner Kunstausstellung In 1926 more than 30 architects from the November Group participated in the Berlin Baukunst exhibition The Kazimir Malevich Show in 1927 organised by the November Group was one of the highlights of its exhibition history In addition the association repeatedly exhibited in local galleries in Berlin for example in April May 1920 an exhibition was held at the Gurlitt Gallery 23 This was followed by a smaller Novembergruppe exhibition from 4 to 30 November 1920 at the book and art antiquarian shop Fraenkel amp Co Josef Altmann Josef Altmann who had run the small gallery since 1914 can be considered the first art dealer of the Novembergruppe who also represented individual members 12 Altmann s gallery again held a group exhibition from 1 to 30 November 1921 Members EditFounding members Edit The group was initially founded mainly by painters Max Pechstein Georg Tappert Cesar Klein Moriz Melzer and Heinrich Richter At the first meeting on 3 December 1918 they were joined by Karl Jakob Hirsch Bernhard Hasler Richard Janthur Rudolf Bauer Bruno Krauskopf Otto Freundlich Wilhelm Schmid the sculptor Rudolf Belling and the architect Erich Mendelsohn From this group the first working committee were drawn Women in the November Group Edit As in other revolutionary artists associations there were only a few women on the membership list of the Novembergruppe Of the 49 founding members from the Sturm circle Hilla Rebay was only one woman although a large number of women were active in the Sturm circle This was different at exhibitions of the November Group Here several women participated in exhibitions in addition to Hannah Hoch and Marie Laurencin for example Emy Roeder and Emmy Klinker 24 List of members Edit A definitive list of all the members of the group is difficult to establish due to a lack of early documentation According to research conducted by the Berlinische Galerie as part of the exhibition project Freedom The art of the Novembergruppe 1918 1935 2018 three lists of members have survived Georg Tappert compiled a handwritten list of members in 1918 which is now in the estate of Walter Gropius in the Bauhaus Archive Berlin 25 A second list with the membership of the Novembergruppe was printed in the catalogue of 1925 26 A third list of members from 1930 was compiled by the Novembergruppe s managing director Hugo Graetz a copy of which is now in the Archive of the Academy of Arts in Berlin 27 Among the mostly over 120 members were architects painters musicians and art theorists The following is a listing of the members alphabetically by the first letter of the surname A Edit Josef Achmann de noted on list from 1918 25 Jankel Adler noted on list from 1930 27 Lou Albert Lasard George Antheil Jean Arp noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Rudolf Ausleger de B Edit Willi Baumeister noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Herbert Bayer noted on list from 1925 26 Peter Behrens noted on list from 1918 25 Herbert Behrens Hangeler de noted on list from 1930 27 Rudolf Belling noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Rudiger Berlit de noted on list from 1918 25 Peter August Bockstiegel noted on list from 1918 25 Kseniya Boguslavskaya noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Brass de Nikolaus Braun de noted on list from 1930 27 Marcel Breuer noted on list from 1930 27 Max ButtingC Edit Heinrich Campendonk noted on list from 1918 25 and 1930 27 D Edit Heinrich Maria Davringhausen Walter Dexel noted on list from 1925 26 Christof Drexel Kinner von Dressler noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Friedrich Peter Drommer de noted on list from 1930 27 Ewald Dulberg de noted on list from 1918 25 E Edit Heinrich Eberhard de noted on list from 1918 25 and 1930 27 A Eberhardt noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Josef Eberz de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Viking Eggeling noted on list from 1925 26 Heinrich Ehmsen noted on list from 1930 27 Hanns Eisler noted on list from 1930 27 Ignaz Epper de noted on list from 1925 26 F Edit Anton Faistauer noted on list from 1918 25 Bedrich Feigl noted on list from 1918 25 Lyonel Feininger noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Conrad Felixmuller noted on list from 1918 25 and 1930 27 Oskar Fischer noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Peter Foerster noted on list from 1925 26 Fred Forbat noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Freese noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Otto Freundlich Theodor Fried noted on list from 1930 27 Alexander Friedrich noted on list from 1918 25 Heinz Fuchs de noted on list from 1918 25 and 1925 26 G Edit Alfred Gellhorn de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Paul Gosch noted on list from 1925 26 Yefim Golyshev noted on list from 1918 25 Werner Gothein de noted on list from 1918 25 Gottfried Graf de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Walter Gramatte noted on list from 1918 25 Otto Griebel noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Walter Gropius noted on list from 1925 26 Otto Grossmann noted on list from 1918 25 George Grosz noted on list from 1930 27 Paul Grunwaldt de noted on list from 1925 26 H Edit Hugo Haring noted on list from 1925 26 Erwin Hahs de noted on list from 1918 25 Bernhard Hasler de noted on list from 1930 27 Emil van Hauth de noted on list from 1930 27 Gustav Havemann noted on list from 1925 26 John Heartfield noted on list from 1930 27 Wilhelm Heckrott de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Hans Siebert von Heister no noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Wieland Herzfelde noted on list from 1930 27 Oswald Herzog de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Ludwig Hilberseimer noted on list from 1925 26 Karl Jakob Hirsch de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Leon Hirsch de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Wilhelm Heckrot Hannah Hoch noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Bernhard Hoetger noted on list from 1918 25 Lothar Homeyer de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Jascha Horenstein noted on list from 1930 27 I Edit Johannes Itten noted on list from 1930 27 J Edit Philipp Jarnach noted on list from 1925 26 Alexej Jawlensky noted on list from 1930 27 Andreas Jawlensky de noted on list from 1930 27 K Edit Walter Kampmann de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Wassily Kandinsky noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Joachim Karsch noted on list from 1930 27 Rita Kersten Andexer noted on list from 1918 25 Martin Kessel noted on list from 1925 26 Georg Kind de noted on list from 1918 25 Bernhard Klein noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Cesar Klein noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Fritz Klein noted on list from 1918 25 and 1925 26 Oskar Kokoschka noted on list from 1918 25 Arthur Korn noted on list from 1925 26 Heinrich Kosina de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Heinrich Kosnick noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Krebs noted on list from 1925 26 Issai Kulvianski de noted on list from 1930 27 Alfred Kubin noted on list from 1918 25 L Edit Otto Lange noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Eva Lau noted on list from 1918 25 Georg Leschnitzer noted on list from 1918 25 El Lissitzky Alfred Lomnitz de noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Luckhardt noted on list from 1925 26 Wassili Luckhardt noted on list from 1925 26 M Edit Thilo Maatsch noted on list from 1930 27 Ewald Matare noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Max Hermann Maxy noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Ludwig Meidner noted on list from 1918 25 Moriz Melzer de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Erich Mendelsohn noted on list from 1918 25 Carlo Mense noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Ludwig Mies van der Rohe noted on list from 1925 26 Otto Moller de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Rudolf Moller de noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Laszlo Moholy Nagy noted on list from 1930 27 Georg Muche noted on list from 1930 27 Albert Mueller de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Otto Mueller noted on list from 1918 25 N Edit Otto Nagel noted on list from 1930 27 Ernest Neuschul de noted on list from 1930 27 O Edit Jacobus Oud noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 P Edit Max Pechstein noted on list from 1918 25 Felix Petyrek noted on list from 1925 26 Hans Poelzig noted on list from 1925 26 Fritz Pollack noted on list from 1930 27 Enrico Prampolini noted on list from 1925 26 Ivan Puni noted on list from 1930 27 Carl Puxkandl noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 R Edit Franz Radziwill noted on list from 1930 27 Hilla von Rebay Walter Reger de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Hans Richter noted on list from 1918 25 and 1930 27 Heinrich Richter noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Joachim Ringelnatz noted on list from 1930 27 Karl Rossing de noted on list from 1930 27 Christian Rohlfs noted on list from 1930 27 Berti Rosenberg noted on list from 1925 26 Kurt Hermann Rosenberg de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Walter Ruttmann noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 S Edit Hans Scharoun Edwin Scharff noted on list from 1918 25 Margarete Scheel noted on list from 1918 25 Hermann Scherchen noted on list from 1930 27 Oskar Schlemmer noted on list from 1925 26 Rudolf Schlichter noted on list from 1930 27 Wilhelm Schmid noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Paul Schmolling de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Georg Schrimpf noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Richard Schrotter noted on list from 1930 27 Kurt Schwerdtfeger de noted on list from 1930 27 Kurt Schwitters noted on list from 1918 25 Arthur Segal noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Lasar Segall noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Hans Soeder de noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Meta Speier noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Spiegel noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Walter Spies Mart Stam noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Heinrich Stegemann noted on list from 1925 26 Milly Steger noted on list from 1918 25 Gertrud Stemmler noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Irma Stern Franz Stock noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 William Straube de noted on list from 1918 25 Fritz Stuckenberg noted on list from 1930 27 Hans Heinz Stuckenschmidt noted on list from 1930 27 T Edit Georg Tappert noted on list from 1918 25 1925 26 and 1930 27 Bruno Taut noted on list from 1925 26 Max Taut noted on list from 1925 26 Heinrich Tessenow noted on list from 1925 26 Heinz Tiessen noted on list from 1925 26 Eduard Trautner noted on list from 1925 26 U Edit Rudolf Utzinger noted on list from 1925 26 V Edit Karl Volker noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Wladimir Rudolfowitsch Vogel noted on list from 1930 27 W Edit Nicolai Wassiliew noted on list from 1930 27 Vincent Weber de noted on list from 1930 27 Kurt Weill noted on list from 1925 26 and 1930 27 Ines Wetzel de noted on list from 1930 27 Gustav Wiethuchter de noted on list from 1930 27 Carel Willink Gert Wollheim Stefan Wolpe noted on list from 1930 27 Z Edit Willy Zierath noted on list from 1918 25 References Edit Novembergruppe Zehn Jahre Novembergruppe Ten Years of the November Group special issue Kunst der Zeit Journal for Art and Literature in German Will Grohmann 3 No 1 3 10 Working Council of the November Group Aufruf in Die schone Raritat vol 2 1918 no 9 advertising section unpaginated November Group circular letter 13 December 1918 in Zehn Jahre Novembergruppe special issue Kunst der Zeit Zeitschrift fur Kunst und Literatur Volume 3 1928 Nos 1 3 Letter from Heinrich Campendonk to Walter Dexel 16 December 1918 Museum Penzberg Campendonk Collection letter 192 a b Kliemann Helga 1969 Die Novembergruppe Bildende Kunst in Berlin Berlin Mann a b c d e f Freiheit die Kunst der Novembergruppe 1918 1935 Thomas Kohler Ralf Burmeister Janina Nentwig Prestel Verlag Munchen 2018 ISBN 978 3 7913 5780 5 OCLC 1077767518 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Geschichte der deutschen Kunst 1918 1945 hrsg von Harald Olbrich in German Harald Olbrich 1 Aufl ed Leipzig 1990 p 279 ISBN 978 3 363 00462 5 OCLC 260218539 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Alfred Gellhorn et al Die Richtung in Der Kunsttopf vol 1 1920 No 3 Janina Nentwig Art and Anti Art in Berlin Around 1920 Dada and the Novembergruppe in Olaf Peters ed Berlin Metropolis 1918 1933 Ausst Kat New York Neue Galerie Munich London New York 2015 pp 36 57 Raoul Hausmann Der Kunsttopf in Berlinische Galerie 1995 2nd Dept 21 54 p 42 f Konstruktivistische internationale schopferische Arbeitsgemeinschaft 1922 1927 Utopien fur eine europaische Kultur in German Bernd Finkeldey Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen Staatliche Galerie Moritzburg Stuttgart G Hatje 1992 pp 17 22 ISBN 3 7757 0376 4 OCLC 27678906 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Letter from the November Group Working Committee to Members 29 November 1924 Library of Congress Washington D C Ludwig Mies van der Rohe Papers MSS32847 Correspondence Box 2 a b Werner J Schweiger Fraenkel amp Co Josef Altmann entry for planned publication Lexikon des Kunsthandels der Moderne im deutschsprachigen Raum 1905 1937 Berlinische Galerie Kunstarchiv Schweiger BG WJS M 1 10 Wilmesmeier Holger Deutsche Avantgarde und Film The Filmatinee The Absolute Film 3 and 10 May 1925 Munster 1994 Werner J Schweiger Kunststube G m b H entry for planned publication Lexikon des Kunsthandels der Moderne im deutschsprachigen Raum 1905 1937 Berlinische Galerie Kunstarchiv Schweiger BG WJS M 1 39 Franz Schulz Kunst Burger Staat in German in Das Forum vol 4 2 no 9 June 1920 pp 655 660 a b Georg Tappert deutscher Expressionist Ausstellungen Stiftung Schleswig Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloss Gottorf Schleswig 20 Marz bis 12 Juni 2005 Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nurnberg 21 Juli bis 23 Oktober 2005 in German Georg Tappert Gesa Bartholomeyczik Irmtraud von Andrian Werburg Anke Daemgen Stiftung Schleswig Holsteinische Landesmuseen Schloss Gottorf Germanisches Nationalmuseum Nurnberg Verl des Germanischen Nationalmuseums 2005 ISBN 3 936688 07 9 OCLC 314798794 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link Willrich Wolfgang 1938 Sauberung des Kunsttempels Eine kunstpolit Kampfschrift zur Gesundg dt Kunst im Geiste nord Art in German 2 Aufl ed Munchen Berlin J F Lehmanns Verl Wilhelmi Christoph 1996 Kunstlergruppen in Deutschland Osterreich und der Schweiz seit 1900 ein Handbuch in German Stuttgart Hauswedell pp 274 284 ISBN 978 3 7762 0400 1 Finkeldey Bernd Stiftung Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen eds 1992 Konstruktivistische Internationale Schopferische Arbeitsgemeinschaft 1922 1927 Utopien fur eine europaische Kultur Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen Dusseldorf 30 Mai bis 23 August 1992 Staatliche Galerie Moritzburg Halle 13 September bis 15 November 1992 in German Dusseldorf Kunstsammlung Nordrhein Westfalen pp 23 30 ISBN 978 3 926154 13 2 German legation in the Netherlands gez Rosen to the Foreign Office 28 February 1921 Federal Archives Files of the Reich Art Warden Edwin Redslob BArch R 32 Bd 69 p 51 f Erste Allgemeine Deutsche Kunstausstellung Moskau Leningrad 1 ya Vseobshaya germanskaya hudozhestvennaya vystavka Moskva Leningrad Mezhrabpom Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek www deutsche digitale bibliothek de in German Retrieved 2023 01 13 Burmeister Ralf Roters Eberhard eds 1995 Hannah Hoch eine Lebenscollage Bd 2 Abt 1 Mit Texten von Eberhard Roters und Heinz Ohff 1921 1945 wiss Bearb und Red Ralf Burmeister Eckhard Furlus in German Berlin Berlinische Galerie ISBN 978 3 7757 0550 9 Exhibition calendar by Fritz Stuckenberg undated Stadtische Galerie Delmenhorst Fritz Stuckenberg Estate Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt ed 2015 Sturm Frauen Kunstlerinnen der Avantgarde in Berlin 1910 1932 eine Einfuhrung in die Ausstellung in German neue Ausg ed Frankfurt am Main Schirn Kunsthalle p 20 ISBN 978 3 89946 244 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb Bauhaus Archive Walter Gropius estate GS 2 Mappe 9 2 5 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf Archiv der Deutschen Kunst Ausstellung Novembergruppe Malerei Plastik Architektur Gustav Eugen Diehl Hrsg Berlin K Ullrich 1925 Jg 1925 H 3 Deutsche Digitale Bibliothek www deutsche digitale bibliothek de in German Retrieved 2023 01 13 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu cv cw cx cy Akademie der Kunste Berlin Autograph Collection Fine Arts BK 1 NG Literature EditHelga Kliemann Die Novembergruppe Gebr Mann Berlin 1969 Galerie Nierendorf Kunstler der Novembergruppe Ausstellungskatalog Galerie Nierendorf Berlin 1985 Galerie Bodo Niemann Die Novembergruppe Ausstellungskatalog Galerie Niemann Berlin 1993 ISBN 3 926298 21 9 Will Grohmann Hrsg 10 Jahre Novembergruppe Sonderheft der Kunst der Zeit Klinkhardt amp Biermann Berlin 3 1928 1 3 Paul Bekker Wesensformen der Musik Veroffentlichung der Novembergruppe B Lachmann Berlin 1925 Max Butting Musikgeschichte die ich miterlebte Henschel Berlin 1955 Christoph Wilhelmi Kunstlergruppen in Deutschland Osterreich und der Schweiz seit 1900 Ein Handbuch Stuttgart 1996 Irene Below Between Africa and Europe in Irma Stern Expressions of a Journey Standard Bank Gallery Johannesburg 2003External links EditManifesto of the November Group translated into Austrian Sign Language by Horst Dittrich dailymotion com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title November Group German amp oldid 1135947948, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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