Art of the 20th Century. Dorothea Eimert
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Название: Art of the 20th Century

Автор: Dorothea Eimert

Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing

Жанр: Иностранные языки

Серия: Art of the 20th Century

isbn: 978-1-78525-930-2, 978-1-78160-235-5

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ members, he is, therefore, the widest ranging. In 1907 he met the art historians Rosa Schapire and Wilhelm Niemeyer, who throughout their lives worked on his behalf. He was represented at the Entartete Kunst exhibit with 25 paintings, two watercolours and 24 pages of illustrations. 608 works by Schmidt-Rottluff were confiscated from German museums in 1938. During the same year, the Nierendorf Gallery in New York showed his watercolours. Three years later, he was banned from painting. His studio was also completely destroyed in 1943 by bombing, so he moved to Rottluff near Chemnitz. In 1945 he also lost all his paintings that had been stored for safe keeping at two estates in Silesia.

      Max Pechstein was the only Brücke artist to have a university education. He completed his studies at the Kunstgewerbeschule Dresden (School of Applied Arts in Dresden) as a master class student, winning the Saxon state prize, the so-called Rome Prize. He joined the Brücke in 1906 and worked together with his new friends in the wild during the summer and in the studio during the winter. During a stay in Nidden in 1911, he focused on the nude. In his memoirs, he wrote: ‘So I continued my reflections upon capturing man and nature as one, more strongly and thoughtfully than at Moritzburg.’

      New compositional experiments in the avant-garde art world of Berlin, such as the Orphism by Delaunay, Italian Futurism and French Cubism gradually began to come to his attention. Compositions from around 1912 to 1913 such as Still Life with Putto and Arum Lily, clearly show a withdraw from expressive colour and design they are replaced by Cubist and geometric elements that underscore the solid construction of the painting. In 1922, Max Pechstein became a member of the Prussian Academy of the Arts and just six years later he received the Prussian State Prize and became a member of the exhibition commission of the Prussian Academy of the Arts. In 1933 he was banned from working and exhibiting and was expelled from the Academy of the Arts in 1937. At the Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art) exhibit, the works of Max Pechstein were also shown and 326 of his works were removed from German museums. However, in 1951 he was named as an Honorary Senator of the Belin Academy of Fine Arts.

      Erich Heckel, Gläserner Tag, 1913.

      Oil on canvas, 138 × 114 cm. Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich.

      Otto Mueller, Three Nudes in the Forest. Watercolour, 68 × 51.5 cm. Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden.

      Max Pechstein, Still Life with Putto and Arum Lily, 1913.

      Oil on canvas, 100.5 × 77 cm. Private collection.

      Otto Mueller was a master of figure composition and his subjects centred on the world of Gypsies. As he wrote in 1919 on the occasion of an exhibition of Paul Cassirer in Berlin, ‘The main goal of my efforts is with the greatest possible simplicity to express the emotions of man and landscape.’ Otto Mueller was the romantic among the Brücke artists. His delicate, exotic gypsies were composed in a landscape left to nature as if in a paradise. He preferred a subdued colouring, mostly green or ochre. From 1924 to 1930 Mueller travelled repeatedly to Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania and Yugoslavia to observe the fascinating world of the gypsies. Supposedly, his mother was the illegitimate child of a Bohemian maid and a Gypsy.

      The flower paintings of Emil Nolde, either in watercolour or painting are enchantingly beautiful. He started with these subjects in 1909 saying, ‘It was on the island of Als in the middle of summer. The colours of the flowers attracted me irresistibly, and, almost suddenly, I was painting. So my first garden paintings were created.’

      As we read in his notes, Mein Leben (My Life), ‘It was a difficult struggle with the colour… In my painting, I always wanted the colours, through me as the painter, to work logically on the canvas as though nature herself created the image, as ore and crystallisations forms, as moss and algae grows, as under the rays of the sun a flower unwraps and must bloom.’

      His subjects were of the great and overpowering aspects of nature. His idea of nature was closely related to his heartfelt ideas and emotions.

      Everything primeval always bound my senses. The great raging sea is still it its original state, the wind, the sun, even the starry sky is also probably still the same as it was almost fifty thousand years ago.

      Nolde’s fixation with the primordial greatly influenced his use of colour, making it more concentrated and intense. His effort to paint his vision of the world through the strength and effect of pure paint evolved to a slow maturity. The first culmination of this came with his first flower and garden paintings from 1906 to 1908. Only in 1905 did he become acquainted with Van Gogh, Gauguin, Monet and the other French artists, as well as the art of primitive cultures. Seeing these was the key to unlocking his full potential as an artist. Now, Emil Hansen, born in Nolde, found his unique painting vocabulary that found its climax in the ecstatic rush of colours which burst forth with a barbaric fire and sensuality. Emil Nolde was one of the great innovators of watercolour.

      The series of religious paintings done by Emil Nolde are some of the most moving examples of natural experience. In 1912 he painted the nine piece altar The Life of Christ and the triptych Maria Aegyptica. In his notes, he wrote, ‘the colours are the material of the painter, the colours in their own lives, crying and laughing, luck and laughter, passionate and holy as love songs and the erotic, as song and choral music.’ In these paintings an ecstatic religious experience and feeling breaks forth. The sublime, the holy, the saintly speak from these works. They were to have taken a central place in the religious section of the 1956 World Exposition in Brussels but the Catholic clergy protested.

      Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Summer, 1913. Oil on canvas, 88 × 104 cm.

      Sprengel collection, Kunstsammlung Hannover, Hannover.

      Max Pechstein, Seated young woman (Moritzburg), 1910.

      Oil on canvas, 80 × 70 cm. Neue Nationalgalerie – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin, Berlin.

      Emil Nolde, Garden Full of Flowers, 1908.

      Oil on canvas, 63 × 78.5 cm. Osthaus Museum, Hagen.

      Christian Rohlfs, House in Soest, 1916.

      Tempera on canvas, 80 × 100 cm. Private collection.

Individuals

      Christian Rolfs is only marginally associated with the Brücke. He was linked to Emil Nolde by a lifelong friendship since 1905. Both artists were united by their love of nature. Both sought to capture their view of the world in pure colour. In 1901 Rolfs was called to the Folkwang School in Hagen. Only in 1927, at the age of 78, did he travel south to Ascona. In the thin and relaxed atmosphere, he found his way to his own late painting style. The vigorous southern light fascinated him. He was entranced by the tropical plant life. The rush of colour that surrounded all the vegetation overpowered him, he, who had come out of the foggy north. ‘Everything is colour, light and a thrill for the eyes, enchanting and delightful and constantly changing from hour to hour.’ The material possibilities with regard to painting mediums always interested Christian Rohlfs, and he experimented with great curiosity. In the early years, he used a palette knife and applied the paint with wallops onto the canvas. With thin paint, he swabbed it up with a rag. He carefully chose the paper surfaces for his watercolours, as he incorporated them into his compositions. His watercolours display a flair for the immaterial. His entire body of work is closely based СКАЧАТЬ