Thanks to his help, Kéve was able to mount an impressive exhibition at Vienna in January 1910. Kéve brought together representatives of very different schools, from Impressionism to late Art Nouveau. It dates from a period marked by the foundation of numerous Hungarian artists' associations, some of which turned their back on tradition. Among them were the Associations of Female Visual Artists, and the Association of Hungarian Artist Working in Watercolours and Pastels. These groups would emphasise the importance of work executed on paper, and strove for the recognition of this genre as an autonomous genre - in line with Max Klinger's publication Painting and Drawing that was to prove very influential.