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:
Under the leadership of Ludwig Meidner, the Pathetiker group was formed in the early part of 1912. Otto Gleichmann, Richard Janthur, Jakob Steinhardt and Erich Waske belonged to this group. The art historian Paul Vogt commented: ‘Like the sound of a raging scream, their appearance required the strongest means possible to be heard in the Babylonian commotion of so many voices during that time.’ Hardly any other early Expressionist work produced in the years between 1912 and 1914 exudes such a singular and all-encompassing momentum of shock and emotion as those of Ludwig Meidner. His Apocalyptic Landscapes are a substratum of concentrated energy. Bursting houses, writhing, breaking lines of streets and fleeing people define the chaotic landscape. Meidner described his condition at the time, as if seismographically measuring the disaster of the impending world war:
Painful impulses made me break everything that was straight and vertical. To spread ruins, shreds and ash across all landscapes. How I always built ruins of houses on my cliffs, woefully divided, and the lamenting call of the bare trees rose up to the croaking skies above. As calling, warning voices the mountains floated in the background, the comet laughed hoarsely and the aeroplanes sailed as if they were hellish dragonflies in the yellow night time storm.
In the twenties, Meidner increasingly dedicated himself to his literary talents.
Among the main representatives of German Expressionism, Karl Hofer defines himself by the emphasis of formality and by a limited colour range. His unmistakeable style was formed around 1919; his paintings marked by an angular roughness and a dry colour, tending to a classic constructive composition. He wrote in 1953 in his memoires:
I possessed the Romantic; it was the Classic that I was looking for… I never created a figure according to the random nature of appearance… The ecstasy of Expressionism did not suite me… Man and the human were and will always be the object of my art.
Lovis Corinth, Walchensee, 1921.
Oil on canvas, Neue Pinakothek, Munich.
Ludwig Meidner, Apocalyptic City, 1913. Oil on canvas, 81.3 × 115.5 cm.
LWL–Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte, Münster.
Karl Hofer, Circus Artists, c. 1921.
Oil on canvas, 148 × 118.5 cm. Folkwang Museum, Essen.
Paul Klee, Villa R, 1919.
Oil on cardboard, 26.5 × 22 cm. Kunstmuseum, Basel.
Franz Marc, In Regen, 1912.
Oil on canvas, 81 × 105 cm. Städtische Galerie, Lenbachhaus, Munich.
Expressionism, which was at home in and around Munich and southern Germany, evolved out of artistic personalities with various temperaments. From a common intellectual viewpoint, they developed common goals. A cosmopolitan nature characterised the artists, who were of various nationalities. Munich was the German art metropolis at the turn of the century before 1912. Berlin developed into the centre of the new art as well. The city attracted painters and sculptors, and its museums attracted a large public. The groups of artists working in the city, and the pulsating artistic activity together with the famous Schwabing art festivals could stand the comparison to Paris. In addition to the academy and the school for fine arts, several private art schools had established themselves, for example the art school of Anton Azbé. Not having known each other previously, the two young Russians, Wassily Kandinsky and Alexej von Jawlensky, crossed paths there.
Kandinsky founded his own art group, Phalanx, and, in 1902, his own art school. In the meantime due to his rising reputation abroad, primarily in Paris, he soon belonged to the most well-known young painters of Munich. In the village-like seclusion of Murnau (with memories of Russian folk art) his paintings had a festive quality and exuded an expressive overabundance and as a result, the conservative Munich Secession denied him permission to exhibit. Consequently, in 1909, together with Jawlensky and his companion, Marianne von Werefkin, along with Adolf Erbslöh, Alexander Kanoldt, Alfred Kubin and Gabriele Münter, he founded the New Artists’ Association. Their first exhibition took place in December 1909 at the Galerie Thannhauser, and a second followed in September 1910, in which Fauvist and early Cubist works were exhibited. This persuaded Franz Marc and August Macke to join. However, the judging for the third exhibition in the autumn of 1911 became a scandal: Kandinsky’s paintings had distanced themselves ever more from the objective, which Erbslöh and Kanoldt resisted. The New Artists’ Association, which had attracted some attention and gained a place for itself in the art world, split up.
Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc founded the Blaue Reiter.They came up with the name, Kandinsky later reported, in the summerhouse in Sindelsdorf belonging to Franz Marc. ‘We both loved blue, Marc – horses, I – the rider. So the name came by itself.’ At first this name was just meant for the almanac, the ‘organ of all new and true ideas of our day.’ The almanac appeared in 1912 together with Kandinsky’s publishing About the Intellectual in Art.
Most of the artists of the New Artists’ Association spontaneously joined the editorial staff of the Blaue Reiter. Their memorable exhibition again took place in December 1911 at the Galerie Thannhauser. In addition, Heinrich Campendonk joined the group along with Robert Delaunay from Paris, who invited the two Russians, David and Vladimir Burliuk, as well as the composer, Arnold Schönberg. Even paintings by Henri Rousseau, the father of the Naïve painters, were on display, which one can explain by the preference of the young Munich artists for Bavarian folk art and verre églomisé pictures. Their second exhibition, showing watercolours, drawings and prints, was held at the Galerie Hanns Goltz in March 1912. Paul Klee also took part at this exhibition, and Lyonel Feininger first joined this exhibition in 1913. The core of the Blaue Reiter was, in addition to Kandinsky and Franz Marc, made up of the Russian Alexej von Jawlensky and his companion, the painter and Russian baroness, Marianne von Werefkin, Kandinsky’s student and subsequent companion, Gabriele Münter, as well as August Macke and Heinrich Campendonk. Lyonel Feininger, Adolf Erbslöh, Alexander Kanoldt, the draughtsman Alfred Kubin, the French Cubist Henri Le Fauconnier, Karl Hofer and the composer Arnold Schönberg.
A collective style, as was the case with the Brücke, was impossible with artists of such varying artistic background and temperament. Everyone accepted the individual creative development and means of expression of the others. Their artistic point of departure was a formal and philosophical one. It was about transcendence. For Kandinsky and Franz Marc, art was on the same plane as religious outlook. Art was ‘made out of inner necessity, coming forth from the emotional depths, and thus it was possible, to make the soul of the observer pulse.’ The thinking was oriented along the pantheistic lines of coming to terms with nature and the overcoming of the material and objective with the aim of discovering one’s own ego. They gave preference to colour harmony, to the dissection and analysis of forms, not to their fragmentation. Their basic philosophical orientation was to make out of the invisible and untouchable, out of pure and simple experiences, a visible and touchable СКАЧАТЬ