Paul Klee (1879-1940) was a Swiss-German modernist painter whose abstract, grid-based compositions drew inspiration from ancient Peruvian textiles and ceramics, making him AP Art History's go-to example of Indigenous Andean art influencing twentieth-century European modernism.
Paul Klee was a Swiss-German painter and Bauhaus teacher whose small, jewel-like abstract paintings often look like woven grids of colored squares. That's not a coincidence. Klee studied ancient Peruvian textiles and ceramics, and the geometric abstraction of Andean weaving (think of the tight checkerboard of tocapu squares on an Inka tunic) shows up directly in his compositional logic.
In AP Art History, Klee isn't tested as one of the 250 required works. He appears in Unit 5 (Indigenous Americas, 1000 BCE-1980 CE) as evidence for a bigger idea, which is that influence flowed FROM the Indigenous Americas TO Europe, not just the other way around. The CED's framing of the Indigenous Americas deliberately puts First Nations traditions first, and Klee is one of the named modernists (along with Bauhaus weavers like Anni Albers and architect Frank Lloyd Wright) who borrowed from those traditions. When you see his name on the exam, the real subject is cross-cultural exchange.
Klee lives in Topic 5.1 (Interactions Within and Across Cultures in Indigenous American Art) and supports learning objective AP Art History 5.1.B, which asks you to explain how interactions with other cultures affect art and art making. The standard exam move is to flip the colonial narrative. Most students assume European art influenced everyone else, but the CED stresses that the Americas shaped the wider world too (INT-1.A.11 makes this point for Mesoamerica's global impact). Klee is the Andean version of that argument. Ancient Peruvian weavers worked out sophisticated geometric abstraction centuries before European modernism 'invented' it, and Klee's borrowing proves the influence ran south-to-north. He also bridges Unit 5 and Unit 4 (Later Europe and Americas), since his actual artistic career belongs to European modernism.
Keep studying AP® Art History Unit 5
Anni Albers (Units 4-5)
Albers is the most direct companion to Klee. Both were at the Bauhaus, and both drew on ancient Peruvian textiles, but Albers went further by actually weaving. She studied Andean techniques hands-on and called ancient Peruvian weavers her teachers. If a question pairs the two, the shared point is Andean influence on Bauhaus abstraction.
Central Andes (Unit 5)
The source of Klee's inspiration. Andean cultures treated textiles as the highest art form, more valuable than gold, and built complex geometric abstraction into works like the All-T'oqapu Tunic. Klee's grids of colored squares look strikingly like tocapu patterns, which is exactly the visual link the exam wants you to see.
Frank Lloyd Wright (Unit 5)
Wright is the architectural parallel to Klee. Just as Klee borrowed from Andean textiles, Wright drew on Mesoamerican forms for his buildings. Together they show that Indigenous American influence on modernism hit painting, weaving, and architecture all at once.
Albrecht Dürer (Units 3 and 5)
Dürer is the much earlier version of the same story. In the 1520s he marveled at Aztec treasures shipped to Europe, calling them works of subtle genius. Klee and Dürer bookend 400 years of European artists being shaped by Indigenous American art, which makes a great continuity pairing.
Klee shows up in multiple-choice questions about cross-cultural artistic exchange, almost always framed around what inspired him (the abstraction and geometry of ancient Peruvian textiles and ceramics) or what his case demonstrates (Indigenous American influence on European modernism). Typical stems ask which aspect of Andean art inspired artists like Klee, or which Andean work influenced twentieth-century European and American artists. No released FRQ has used his name verbatim, but he's strong contextual evidence for any free-response prompt about interactions across cultures in Unit 5, especially if you're asked to explain influence flowing outward from the Indigenous Americas. The skill being tested is never Klee biography. It's whether you can name the direction of influence and the visual evidence for it.
Both were Bauhaus artists inspired by ancient Peruvian textiles, so they blur together fast. The difference is medium and depth of engagement. Klee was a painter who absorbed Andean geometric abstraction into his canvases. Albers was a weaver who adopted the actual Andean medium and techniques, studying pre-Columbian textiles directly. If a question asks who translated Andean influence into painting, that's Klee. If it asks who carried the weaving tradition itself into modernism, that's Albers.
Paul Klee was a Swiss-German modernist painter and Bauhaus teacher whose abstract grid compositions were inspired by ancient Peruvian textiles and ceramics.
On the AP exam, Klee is evidence for learning objective 5.1.B, showing that interactions with Indigenous American cultures shaped European art making.
The direction of influence is the whole point. Andean weavers developed geometric abstraction centuries before European modernism, and Klee borrowed from them, not the reverse.
Klee belongs to a cluster of modernists influenced by the Indigenous Americas, including Anni Albers (Andean weaving) and Frank Lloyd Wright (Mesoamerican architecture).
Klee is not one of the 250 required works, so you won't be asked to identify his paintings, only to explain what his Andean borrowing demonstrates about cross-cultural exchange.
Klee (1879-1940) was a Swiss-German modernist painter who found inspiration in ancient Peruvian textiles and ceramics. AP Art History uses him in Topic 5.1 as an example of Indigenous Andean art influencing twentieth-century European modernism.
No. None of Klee's paintings are in the required image set. He appears in the Unit 5 course framework as contextual evidence for cross-cultural exchange, so you need to know what influenced him and why it matters, not identify specific Klee works.
Both were Bauhaus artists inspired by ancient Peruvian textiles, but Klee was a painter who translated Andean geometric abstraction into canvas, while Albers was a weaver who worked in the Andean medium itself and studied pre-Columbian techniques directly.
Because the unit's big argument is that influence flowed outward from the Americas. The CED frames the Indigenous Americas as one of the world's oldest artistic traditions, and Klee proves Andean abstraction shaped European modernism, flipping the usual Europe-first narrative.
The geometric abstraction of Andean textiles and ceramics, especially grid-based patterns like the tocapu squares on Inka tunics. Klee's compositions of small colored squares echo that woven, modular structure.
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