Intuition

[Intuition]

  • 1968
  • Wooden box with pencil inscription.
    30 x 21 x 6 cm
  • Edition: unlimited, approx. 12,000 made; signed and dated, unnumbered
  • Publisher: Vice-Versand, Remscheid
  • Catalogue Raisonné No.: 7

The multiple Intuition takes the form of a shallow, open box, assembled roughly from inexpensive cuts of timber. Thousands of these boxes were produced in Beuys’s lifetime, each featuring the same three-part sequence of pencil inscriptions. The first and uppermost of these inscriptions consists of the word ‘Intuition,’ beneath which lie two horizontal lines. Beuys intended these lines as pictorial evocations of reason and intuition respectively.1 The short, standing strokes with which the upper line is bounded, call to mind the determinacy of rational thought. The lower line, by contrast, is open at one end, evoking the more enigmatic paths along which intuition can travel.

Manufactured in an unlimited edition, this multiple was originally sold by mail order for eight Deutschmarks. The low cost and ready availability of the work fulfilled the wish of Beuys and his publisher Wolfgang Feelisch to make art more accessible to the general public. Feelisch produced multiples with dimensions scaled to those of other household items. Because of their undefined purpose, these objects could stimulate their owners’ imaginations.2 This aim resonates with Beuys’s famous quote that ‘everyone is an artist’— a statement with which he suggested that all forms of creativity were artistic, not just the work of professional artists. As an invitation to think outside the box, Intuition expressed Beuys’s aspiration to activate the creativity of individuals.


  1. Joseph Beuys, Jeder Mensch ist ein Künstler: Gespräche auf der documenta 5/1972 (Ullstein Sachbuch: Frankfurt am Main/Berlin, 1988), 29. 

  2. As recounted in Kerstin Skrobanek, ‘Find a purpose for the pocket: Das Multiple als Motor unterschiedlicher Liberalisierungs- und Demokratisierungsprozesse in den 1960er Jahren: Die Sammlung Heinz Beck erzählt,’ in Gut aufgelegt: Die Sammlung Heinz Beck (Wienand Verlag: Köln, 2013), 14. 

    Photo 1

    © Mario Gastinger, Photographics, Munich

    Katalog Museum Mönchengladbach 1967