A new art exhibition featuring the works of world-renowned graphic artist Maurits Cornelis Escher, M.C. Escher: Infinite Variations, opens at the World Chess Hall of Fame (WCHOF) on May 2, 2019, and will be on display through September 22, 2019.
The 100+ piece exhibit showcases Escher’s extreme variety of groundbreaking techniques and subjects. The new exhibit will display works from throughout his career—starting with his early Italian landscape sketches, self-portraits and book illustrations to his most iconic images of impossible spaces, tessellations, infinity and his metamorphosis series. The extensive Escher collection will occupy 3000 square feet at the WCHOF, while an extension of the show will also be on display at the Saint Louis University Museum of Art (SLUMA).
“As the lender of these M.C. Escher masterpieces, it gives me great joy to see them on display in Saint Louis for the first time ever,” said Paul Firos, founder of the Herakleidon Museum and Pan Art Connections, Inc. “I have long loved M.C. Escher for his attention to detail and mathematical principles. The parallels between his work and the intricacies of chess are striking and unique. I look forward to sharing these Escher treasures at the World Chess Hall of Fame and the Saint Louis University Museum of Art, and I hope guests are as fascinated as I am by the depth and beauty of the Escher experience.”
Of the noted Escher works on display at the WCHOF, Metamorphosis II—made using 20 woodblocks printed meticulously on joined sheets of rice paper to create a composition almost 13 feet long—provides a striking parallel to the beauty of chess. Inspired by the stream of consciousness manner in which the mind fits together unrelated subjects, the patterns, shapes, creatures and cubes of the piece eventually morph into a chessboard.
Another Escher masterpiece is Snakes, created using the woodcut technique, a favorite of Escher throughout his career. Crafted with the intention of taking the viewer to the limit of the infinite, Escher notably made no attempt to depict the smallest circles visible to the naked eye, feeling the suggestion of a decrease in size was sufficient to create the illusion. This meticulously-designed artwork was his last creation prior to his death in 1972.
“The beauty and intricacies of M.C. Escher’s works have influenced artists and art-lovers for decades,” said WCHOF Chief Curator Shannon Bailey. “It is an honor for the World Chess Hall of Fame and Saint Louis University Museum of Art to bring these works to the heart of America for display in Saint Louis for the very first time. It is our hope that guests to this exhibition get lost in the endless spaces brought to life by a chess enthusiast who is one of the world’s most prolific artists.”