Alright, so someone told me to talk about this “Paul Klee Pedagogical Sketchbook.” I ain’t no fancy artist or book reader, mind you, but I’ll tell ya what I understand from lookin’ at it and hearin’ folks talk.
First off, this Paul Klee fella, he was a teacher, see? Taught folks about art and stuff. And this sketchbook, it ain’t just a bunch of pretty pictures. It’s more like a how-to guide, but not the kind with step-by-step instructions like bakin’ a pie. It’s more about gettin’ you to see things differently.
They say he was teachin’ at some place called Bauhaus. Sounds German, don’t it? Anyways, he was teachin’ all sorts of things – bookbindin’, makin’ stained glass, even paintin’ on walls. And this sketchbook, it was part of his teachin’. He was tryin’ to get his students to think about how things look, and how you can make ’em look different on paper or in glass or whatever.
- He wasn’t just showin’ ’em how to draw a tree, see? He was showin’ ’em how to look at a tree and then make it…well, somethin’ else. Somethin’ called “rumlich,” whatever that means. Sounds fancy, like somethin’ you’d find in a big city museum.
- They say he was into that surreal stuff, you know, like dreams and things that don’t make sense in real life. And abstract too. That’s when you can’t really tell what the picture is supposed to be. Just shapes and colors, mostly.
Now, I looked at some of them pictures in that book, and I gotta say, some of ’em are just plain weird. Squiggly lines, funny lookin’ creatures, stuff that don’t look like nothin’ I ever seen before. But I guess that was the point. He was tryin’ to get folks to use their imagination, to see things in a new way.
He wanted you to go on an “adventure in seein’,” they say. Like you’re explorin’ somethin’ new, even if it’s just a simple thing like an apple or a chair. He’d show you how to look at it from different angles, how to break it down into shapes and lines, how to make it look like it’s movin’ or changin’ even though it’s just sittin’ there on the page.
And it ain’t just about drawin’ pretty pictures, neither. It’s about thinkin’, about understandin’ how things work, how they fit together. He was teachin’ folks about space and how to make things look like they’re deep or flat, near or far. All that fancy stuff artists gotta know.
It’s a tough book, though, I ain’t gonna lie. Not the kind you can just flip through and understand right away. You gotta really look at them pictures, and think about what he was tryin’ to say. And even then, you might not get it. But that’s okay, I reckon. Art ain’t always supposed to be easy. Sometimes it’s supposed to make you scratch your head and wonder.
This sketchbook, it came out in 1953, long after he passed, I think. But folks are still readin’ it, still learnin’ from it. That tells you somethin’, don’t it? That this Paul Klee fella, he knew what he was talkin’ about. He had a way of seein’ the world that was different from most folks, and he was tryin’ to share that with others. And that’s a good thing, I reckon. Always good to learn new ways of lookin’ at things, even if you’re just an old woman like me who don’t know nothin’ about art.
So, if you’re lookin’ for a book that’ll teach you how to draw a perfect rose, this ain’t it. But if you’re lookin’ for a book that’ll make you think, that’ll make you see the world in a new way, then maybe you should give this “Pedagogical Sketchbook” a try. Just don’t expect it to be easy. And don’t be surprised if you end up scratchin’ your head a lot. That’s just part of the adventure, I guess.
Tags:[“Paul Klee”, “Pedagogical Sketchbook”, “Bauhaus”, “Abstract Art”, “Art Education”, “Visual Arts”, “Surrealism”, “Art Theory”, “Drawing”, “20th Century Art”]
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