François Morellet, A.P.R.I.O.R.I., 2024, Würth Collection Inv. 8220 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2025

Current atrium exhibtion

The Versatility of Geometry
François Morellet Centenary
Würth Collection

Atrium, Museum Würth 2, Künzelsau

8 March 2026 to 24 January 2027

10 a.m. - 6 p.m. daily

Admission free

 

François Morellet (1926–2016) is regarded as one of the most important representatives of Geometric Abstraction. His works adhere to both, a systematic approach and logic, yet they are playful and full of esprit. To mark the centenary of this versatile pioneer of a new concrete art, the Würth Collection is presenting an exhibition of his works. The show will also take into account colleagues and kindred spirits of the French artist, such as Max Bill, Almir Mavignier and Anni Albers.

As of the 1950s, Morellet’s works were strikingly consistent. He developed a distinctive visual language based on his formal geometrical inventiveness and systematic concepts. Each work complies with ordering principles which he himself defined as juxtaposition, superimposition, chance, interference or fragmentation. Having started with painting, he was one of the first artists to work with artificial light in the 1960s. Of the artist’s numerous projects in the public domain, the works that stand out particularly are those he realised for the Louvre in Paris and the Paul Löbe Haus, parliamentary building of the German Bundestag in Berlin.

 

There is of course much more to Morellet’s oeuvre than his clear stylistic idiom. Through the use of titles, which are full of allusions and wordplay, the “non-linguistic” aspect of abstract art is often extended and is especially apt in French. These open up interpretational possibilities for viewers that are both intellectual and entertaining. The artist speaks of "collisions" and describes his work as being “almost nothing” (“Presque rien”), although not without challenging us to read whatever we want into that “nothing”. The exhibition may be understood, therefore, as an invitation to enter into a cheerful and serious dialogue with works of art that ascribe an active role to us as viewers.

Gallery

A steel sphere made of an interwoven grid structure

François Morellet, Sphère-trames, 1962, Würth Collection, Inv. 6626 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Ivan Baschang

Geometric orange pattern on a square piece of wood

François Morellet, 4 trames de tirets pivotés sur un côté (du rouge au jaune) / Lunatique neonly 16 Quarters of a Circle No. 2, 1971, Würth Collection, Inv. 4669 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Ivan Baschang

A geometric wall-mounted sculpture composed of neon tubes and additional non‑neon components

François Morellet, Relâche compact nº 3, 1993, Würth Collection, Inv. 15621 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Estate Morellet

Lines and dashed lines form zigzag shapes on a square canvas

François Morellet, π piquant n° 1, 1 = 10°, 51 décimales / Prickly π No. 1, 1 = 10°, 51 Decimals, 1998, Würth Collection, Inv. 4670 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Estate Morellet

Eine Skulptur von François Morellet mit leuchtenden Neonröhren.

François Morellet, Lunatique neonly 16 quarts de cercle n° 2 / Lunatique neonly 16 Quarters of a Circle No. 2, 2001, Würth Collection, Inv. 7236 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Estate Morellet

Ein Werk von François Morellet mit farbigen geometrischen Formen.

François Morellet, A PRIORI, 2004, Würth Collection, Inv. 8220 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Ivan Baschang

A square format divided into three differently colored thirds, each with a distinct pattern

François Morellet, Striptyque n° 1, 2005, Würth Collection, Inv. 9867 © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2026. Photo: Ivan Baschang

Brochure

Additional Artists in the exhibition

Anni Albers | Getulio Alviani | Richard Anuskiewicz | Hans (Jean) Arp | Max Bill | Gianni Colombo | Günter Fruhtrunk | Anthony Hill | Enzo Mari | Aurelie Nemours | Kenneth Martin | Almir Mavignier | Henryk Stažewski | Ludwig Wilding

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