Jean Willi (born October 14, 1945) is a Swiss painter, draftsman and author.[1]

Early career edit

Jean Willi completed a six-year training course as a graphic designer in Basel and worked there and in Paris, among other places. As a designer for Olivetti and Kodak. In 1973 he started painting and drawing after a trip to Africa. In 1977 he developed his own drawing technique in which a kind of calligraphy was combined to form structures and networks. Related works were exhibited in a group exhibition in Zürich in 1982 under the title Schreibgestik ('writing gestures') together with artists such as Roman Opałka and Cy Twombly.

Success in the eighties edit

He attempted to paint letters based on an assumption of how they could sound like. In 1988 the Swiss art magazine Du published his illustrations for One Hundred Years of Solitude[2] He showed the diversity of his artistic possibilities in the Basel exhibition Pole[3] in 1989 when he tried to combine the various facets of his work and at the same time play them off against each other. Willi designed and illustrated a number of books, published texts in magazines and co-wrote scripts with Martin Suter for the Swiss television series Die Direktorin [de] (The Director).

References edit

  1. ^ Passagen. Pro Helvetia. 2004. pp. 20–, 24–. Retrieved 16 June 2011.
  2. ^ "Kultur und Ästhetik im Denken der deutschen Κlassik". Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie. 36 (2). 1988-01-01. doi:10.1524/dzph.1988.36.2.125. ISSN 2192-1482.
  3. ^ Willi, Jean; Schmidt, Aurel (1989), Jean Willi: "Pole": Galerie zem Specht, Basel, 2 March – 25 March 1989 (in German), Editions Galerie Carzaniga & Ueker, OCLC 927615813
  • This article is based on a translation from the German Wikipedia.