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Books > Arts & Architecture > History of art / art & design styles > From 1900 > Art styles, 1900 to First World War > Expressionism
Marianne Werefkin and the Women Artists in Her Circle traces the
relationships between the modernist artists in Werefkin's circle,
including Erma Bossi, Elisabeth Epstein, Natalia Goncharova,
Elizaveta Kruglikova, Else Lasker-Schuler, Marta Liepina-Skulme,
Elena Luksch-Makowsky, and Maria Marc. The book demonstrates that
their interactions were dominated not primarily by national ties,
but rather by their artistic ideas, intellectual convictions, and
gender roles; it offers an analysis of the various artistic scenes,
the places of exchange, and the artists' sources of inspiration.
Specifically focusing on issues of cosmopolitan culture,
transcultural dialogue, gender roles, and the building of new
artistic networks, the collection of essays re-evaluates the
contributions of these artists to the development of modern art.
Contributors: Shulamith Behr, Marina Dmitrieva, Simone Ewald, Bernd
Fathke, Olga Furman, Petra Lanfermann, Tanja Malycheva, Galina
Mardilovich, Antonia Napp, Carla Pellegrini Rocca, Dorothy Price,
Hildegard Reinhardt, Kornelia Roeder, Kimberly A. Smith, Laima
Lauckaite-Surgailiene, Baiba Vanaga, and Isabel Wunsche
This important publication accompanies a major exhibition at The
Courtauld Gallery, London, of paintings by Edvard Munch, one of the
world's greatest modern artists. The exhibition and catalogue
showcase 18 major works from the collection of KODE Art Museums in
Bergen. The works span the most significant part of Munch's
artistic development and have never before been shown as a group
outside of Scandinavia. KODE houses one of the most important
collections of paintings by Edvard Munch (1863-1944) in the world.
The collection was assembled at the beginning of the 20th century
by the Norwegian industrialist, mill owner and philanthropist
Rasmus Meyer (1858-1916), who was one of the first significant
early collectors of Munch's work. Meyer knew Munch personally and
was astute in acquiring major canvases by the artist that chart his
artistic development. Edvard Munch: Masterpieces from Bergen
explores this group of remarkable works in detail and considers the
important role of Rasmus Meyer as a collector. The exhibition and
publication include seminal paintings from Munch's early 'realist'
phase of the 1880s, such as Morning (1884), which was made when the
artist was just twenty years old, and Summer Night (1889), a
pivotal work that shows the artist's move towards the expressive
and psychologically charged work for which he became famous. These
paintings launched Munch's career and set the stage for his
renowned, highly expressive paintings of the 1890s when his
compositions became powerful projections of his emotions and
imaginative states. Such works are a major feature of the
exhibition that includes remarkable canvases from Munch's famous
'Frieze of Life' series, such as Evening on Karl Johan (1892),
Melancholy (1894-96) and At the Death Bed (1895). Through his
'Frieze of Life' works, Munch intended to address profound themes
of human existence, from love to death. The artist used his own
experiences as source material to make visceral depictions of the
human psyche, which he hoped would help others understand their own
life. Munch's powerful use of colour and form to convey his
subjects marked him out as one of the most radical painters at the
turn of the 20th century. This fully illustrated publication
includes a catalogue of the works, with contributions by leading
experts in their fi eld from KODE and The Courtauld.
This volume commemorates the 100th anniversary of Vincent van
Gogh's death. Major van Gogh scholars present essays that reexamine
the painter's place in the art world of his time, the phenomenal
growth in his reputation, and his influence on later art movements
and individual artists. At the time of his death and for some years
after, there was a question as to whether van Gogh's approach would
gain recognition. Today, he is seen as one of the most popular and
recognized of the world's artists, and his impact on 20th-century
art is unquestioned. How and why this occurred is a major theme
throughout this essay collection.
Among the topics examined are iconography; van Gogh's poetry as
well as the literature that influenced him and that he, in turn,
influenced; psychological and religious aspects of van Gogh's
painting and self-imaging; and how van Gogh has been interpreted. A
section on his legacy in art concludes this major reassessment of
van Gogh's place in art history. An important collection for art
scholars and researchers as well as public library patrons.
This book presents new research on the histories and legacies of
the German Expressionist group Blaue Reiter, the founding force
behind modernist abstraction. For the first time Blaue Reiter is
subjected to a variety of novel inter-disciplinary perspectives,
ranging from a philosophical enquiry into its language and visual
perception to analyses of its gender dynamics, its reception at
different historical junctures throughout the twentieth century and
its legacies for post-colonial aesthetic practices. The volume
offers a new perspective on familiar aspects of Expressionism and
abstraction, taking seriously the inheritance of modernism for the
twenty-first century in ways that will help to recalibrate the
field of Expressionist studies for future scholarship. Blaue Reiter
still matters, the contributors argue, because the legacies of
abstraction are still being debated by artists, writers,
philosophers and cultural theorists today. -- .
Address book companion to the exciting and luxurious Flame Tree
Notebooks. Combining high-quality production with magnificent fine
art, the covers are printed on foil in five colours, embossed, then
foil stamped. And they're powerfully practical: a pocket at the
back for receipts and scraps, two bookmarks and a solid magnetic
side flap. These are perfect for personal use and make a dazzling
gift. Produced in partnership with the National Gallery, this
stunning address book features Vincent van Gogh's Sunflowers.
Vincent van Gogh painted a series of pictures depicting sunflowers,
having first been inspired by the yellow flowers in Paris when he
saw them growing in the gardens of Montmartre. Sunflowers were
symbolic of life and hope to the artist, and could also be
associated with his concept of the sun - glowing, yellow and
hopeful.
Jennifer Anna Gosetti-Ferencei demonstrates that the exotic, as
reflected in major works of German literature and in the philosophy
and art that inspires it, provokes central questions about the
modern self and the spaces it inhabits. Exotic spaces in the
writings of such authors as Thomas Mann, Franz Kafka, Stefan Zweig,
Robert Musil, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Gottfried Benn, and Bertold
Brecht, along with the thought of Nietzsche, Freud, Levi-Strauss,
and Simmel and the art of German Expressionism, are shown to
present alternatives to the landscape and experience of modernity.
In an examination of the concept of the exotic and of spatial
experience in their cultural, subjective, and philosophical
contingencies, Gosetti-Ferencei shows that exotic spaces may
contest and reconfigure the relationship between the familiar and
the foreign, the self and the other. Exotic spaces may serve not
only to affirm the subject in a symbolic conquering of territory,
as emphasized in post-colonial interpretations, or project the
fantasy of escapism to a lost paradise, as utopian readings
suggest, but condition moral, aesthetic, or imaginative
transformation. Such transformation, while risking disaster or
dissolution of the self as well as endangerment of the other, may
promote new possibilities of perceiving or being, and reconfigure
the boundaries of a familiar world. As exotic spaces are conceived
as mystical, liberating, erotic, infectious, frightening or
mysterious, several possibilities for transformation emerge in
their exposure: re-enchantment through epiphany; the collapse of
the rational self; liberation of the imagination from the confines
of the familiar world; and aesthetic transformation, revealing the
paradoxically 'primitive' nature of modern experience. In
strikingly original readings of canonical authors and compelling
rediscoveries of forgotten ones, this study establishes that exotic
experience can evidence the fragility of the European or Germanic
self as depicted in modernist literature, revealing the usually
unconsidered boundaries of the subject's own familiar world.
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Munch
(Paperback)
Steffen Kverneland
1
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R503
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An extraordinary and inventive graphic biography, Steffen
Kverneland's Munch explores the relationships and obsessions that
drove the artist behind 'The Scream'. Using text drawn from the
writings of Edvard Munch and his contemporaries, this extensively
researched and beautifully drawn graphic novel debunks the familiar
myth of the half-mad expressionist painter - anguished, starving
and ill-treated - to reveal the artist's neglected sense of humour
and optimism. Born out of a life-long fascination with all things
Munch, Kverneland's award-winning seven-year project is the
funniest and most entertaining portrait yet of a complex man and a
pioneering artist. "Munch is a dazzling use of sequential
storytelling... Rarely have I read a more entertaining biography."
The Comics Journal
During the period in which Expressionist artists were active in
central Europe, art historians were producing texts which also
began to be characterized evocatively as 'expressionist', yet the
notion of an expressionist art history has yet to be fully explored
in historiographic studies of the discipline. This anthology offers
a cross-section of noteworthy art history texts that have been
described as expressionist, along with critical commentaries by an
international group of scholars. Written between 1912 and 1933, the
primary sources have been selected from the published scholarship
of both recognized and less-familiar figures in the field's
Germanic tradition: Wilhelm Worringer, Fritz Burger, Ernst
Heidrich, Max Dvorak, Heinrich Woelfflin, and Carl Einstein.
Translated here for the first time, these examples of an
expressionist turn in art history, along with their secondary
analyses and the book's introduction, offer a productive lens
through which to re-examine the practice and theory of art history
in the early twentieth century.
Now available again, this visually stunning collection of Gustav
Klimt's landscape paintings brings to light a lesser-known aspect
of the Viennese painter's oeuvre. While Gustav Klimt is largely
revered for his opulent, symbolladen portraits of the Viennese
bourgeoisie, these works were just one aspect of his artistic
expression. His landscapes represent an important facet of his
career and are a valuable contribution to the school of European
nature painting. For many years the artist travelled to the
Austrian and Italian countryside during the summer, where he took
advantage of the extraordinary light and spectacular hues to paint
and sketch landscapes. Among the most exquisite of Klimt's
landscapes are those in which he experimented with composition and
style. Accompanied by scholarly essays, the images reproduced in
this book comprise all extant landscapes from this brilliant
artist, proving that his mastery extends beyond portraiture and
revealing themes that appeared throughout his life's work.
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Kandinsky
(Hardcover)
Hajo Duchting
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R446
R409
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Over the course of his artistic career, Wassily Kandinsky
(1866-1944) transformed not only his own style, but the course of
art history. From early figurative and landscape painting, he went
on to pioneer a spiritual, emotive, rhythmic use of color and line
and is today credited with creating the first purely abstract work.
As much a teacher and theorist as he was a practicing artist,
Kandinsky's interests in music, theater, poetry, philosophy,
ethnology, myth, and the occult, were all essential components to
his painting and engraving. He was involved with both the
influential Blaue Reiter and Bauhaus groups and left a legacy not
only of dazzling visual work, but also of highly influential
treatises such as Concerning the Spiritual in Art. Key tenets
included the connections between painting, music and mystical
experience, and the purification of art away from material realism
and towards an emotional expression, condensed in particular by
color. This book presents key Kandinsky works to introduce his
repertoire of vivid colors, forms, and feelings. Tracing the
artist's radical stylistic development, it shows how one painter's
progression paved the way for generations of abstract expression to
come. About the series Born back in 1985, the Basic Art Series has
evolved into the best-selling art book collection ever published.
Each book in TASCHEN's Basic Art series features: a detailed
chronological summary of the life and oeuvre of the artist,
covering his or her cultural and historical importance a concise
biography approximately 100 illustrations with explanatory captions
'My art is a self-confession - in it I seek to clarify my
relationship with the world. But at the same time I have always
thought and felt that my art could also clarify other people's
quest for the truth' Edvard Munch Why do people travel from across
the world to see Edvard Munch's artworks? Munch painted emotions in
a way that nobody had ever seen before, depicting love, friendship
and the darker sides of life. This book gives readers the
opportunity to become better acquainted with Edvard Munch and his
oeuvre. It takes a close look at the artworks and explores the
stories behind some of the most famous paintings in the world, such
as Madonna and The Scream.
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Kirchner
(Hardcover)
Norbert Wolf
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R449
R413
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Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938) is regarded as one of the key
figures in 20th-century European art. A Modernist to his bones, he
sent seismic waves through the art world with his hard-edged,
intensely colored paintings and disseminated his ideas through Die
Brucke art movement and the MUIM-Institut school of modernist
painting, both of which he cofounded. Kirchner's work reconciled
past and present through an Expressionist prism, reflecting the
latest avant-garde ideas in art, while exploring traditional
academic approaches and subjects. His works tackled social, moral,
and emotional questions with a fierce intensity. Distorted
perspectives, rough lines, and unusual colors were mainstays of his
practice, as well as a recurring interest in capturing the human
form, whether in frenetic city vistas such as Berlin Street Scene
(1913) or in his famously decadent studio. In this introductory
book, we explore the stretch of Kirchner's career through Germany
and Switzerland, including his founding of Die Brucke, and his
inclusion in the Nazis' infamous "degenerate art" exhibition in
1937. Along the way, we'll encounter vivid landscapes, stark nudes,
intense urban settings, and, above all, a persistent emphasis on
the emotional experience of painter and viewer. About the series
Born back in 1985, the Basic Art Series has evolved into the
best-selling art book collection ever published. Each book in
TASCHEN's Basic Art series features: a detailed chronological
summary of the life and oeuvre of the artist, covering his or her
cultural and historical importance a concise biography
approximately 100 illustrations with explanatory captions
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Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
(Hardcover)
Jill Lloyd, Janis Staggs; Foreword by Ronald S. Lauder, Renee Price; Contributions by Nelson Blitz
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R1,354
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Throughout his career, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner employed a highly
inventive and original use of colour. He favoured novel
applications of paint in unusual matte finishes. For Kirchner,
colour was of primary importance, coupled with technique and style.
He was one of the leading Expressionist painters of the time and
was one of the founding members of the Brucke. In his deeply
personal depictions, he focused on the places where he lived and
worked and his close friends and associates. This book,
accompanying a major exhibition at the Neue Galerie New York,
provides a visual survey of Kirchner's oeuvre and offers an
in-depth analysis of different aspects of the artist's output.
Essays by leading experts examine Kirchner's approach to colour,
his interest in the decorative arts, how electric light affected
his treatment of colour, the impact of Nietzsche on his work, and
how he was profoundly changed by World War I. This book includes
illustrations of nearly 40 paintings, 30 prints, as well as
drawings, sketchbooks, photographs, and decorative work.
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Women of Abstract Expressionism
(Hardcover)
Joan Marter; Introduction by Gwen F. Chanzit; Contributions by Robert Hobbs, Ellen G. Landau, Susan Landauer; Created by …
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R1,633
R1,386
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The celebrated survey of female Abstract Expressionist artists
revealing the richness and lasting influence of their work The
artists Jay DeFeo, Helen Frankenthaler, Grace Hartigan, Elaine de
Kooning, Lee Krasner, Joan Mitchell, and many other women played
major roles in the development of Abstract Expressionism, which
flourished in New York and San Francisco in the 1940s and 1950s and
has been recognized as the first fully American modern art
movement. Though the contributions of these women were central to
American art of the twentieth century, their work has not received
the same critical attention as that of their male counterparts.
Women of Abstract Expressionism is a long-overdue survey. Lavishly
illustrated with full-color plates emphasizing the expressive
freedom of direct gesture and process at the core of the movement,
this book features biographies of more than forty artists, offering
insight into their lives and work. Essays by noted scholars explore
the techniques, concerns, and legacies of women in Abstract
Expressionism, shedding light on their unique experiences. This
groundbreaking book reveals the richness of the careers of these
important artists and offers keen new reflections on their work and
the movement as a whole. Published in association with the Denver
Art Museum Exhibition Schedule: Mint Museum, Charlotte, N.C.
(10/22/16-01/22/17) Palm Springs Art Museum (02/18/17-05/28/17)
Else Lasker-Schuler, a pivotal figure in German Expressionism,
presided over avant-garde cafe life in pre-World War I Berlin in
much the same way Gertrude Stein did in Paris around the same time.
Her poetry, prose, plays and graphic art are not very well known in
the English-speaking world, but her work has been enjoying a
critical and popular revival since she was rediscovered in the
1960s. Else Lasker-Schuler's life and work as a Jew, a woman, and a
writer and artist in Nazi Germany and in other locations after
Hitler's takeover are chronicled in this book. It begins with her
flight to Switzerland, after receving Germany's top literary prize,
and then goes back to her childhood and follows her life through to
its end in Jerusalem, where she died five months before Germany
surrendered to the Allies. It covers her marriages to Dr Berthold
Lasker, brother of the world chess champion, and to Herwarth
Walden, founder of the avant-garde periodical, gallery and
publishing house ""Der Sturm"" (The Storm), and her friendships
with Martin Buber, Karl Kraus, Franz Marc, Gottfried Benn and
Gershom Scholem.
During 1889, Belgian artist James Ensor (1860-1949) painted a
monumental canvas that would be his magnum opus: The Entry of
Christ into Brussels in 1889. The work is one of the most complex
paintings ever painted. It was only 40 years after its completion
that the monumental canvas was first publicly exhibited at the
James Ensor retrospective at the Brussels Palais des Beaux-Arts in
1929. Needless to say, therefore, that the exhibiting of Ensor's
work in 1929 was for many a revelation. Until then it had been seen
and was known only to a limited group of visitors and insiders.
Between 1889 and 1929, a veritable revolution had taken place in
the visual arts. Before and during World War I, Fauvism, Cubism,
Futurism, Expressionism, and Dadaism all came into being. Few
explanations can accommodate the full daring and frenzy of such a
painting which chaotic composition and barbaric style seem
revolutionary, and look far beyond the early 20th century. Since
the purchase of the work in 1987 by the J. Paul Getty Museum (Los
Angeles), The Entry has acquired cult status. No other work depicts
the notion of belgitude so aptly as The Entry of Christ into
Brussels in 1889, and yet the painting can in the first place be
regarded as a somewhat quirky but striking representation of
Ensor's vision of humanity.
This book presents new research on the histories and legacies of
the German Expressionist group Blaue Reiter, the founding force
behind modernist abstraction. For the first time Blaue Reiter is
subjected to a variety of novel inter-disciplinary perspectives,
ranging from a philosophical enquiry into its language and visual
perception to analyses of its gender dynamics, its reception at
different historical junctures throughout the twentieth century and
its legacies for post-colonial aesthetic practices. The volume
offers a new perspective on familiar aspects of Expressionism and
abstraction, taking seriously the inheritance of modernism for the
twenty-first century in ways that will help to recalibrate the
field of Expressionist studies for future scholarship. Blaue Reiter
still matters, the contributors argue, because the legacies of
abstraction are still being debated by artists, writers,
philosophers and cultural theorists today. -- .
A penetrating reevaluation of the period in which the German
Expressionist George Grosz created his best-known, most searing
satirical works This overdue investigation of George Grosz's
(1893-1959) most compelling paintings, drawings, prints, and
collages offers a reassessment of the celebrated German
Expressionist during his years in Berlin-from his earliest artistic
endeavors to the trenchant satirical images and searing depictions
of moral decay between the World Wars for which he is known today.
Menacing street scenes, rowdy cabarets, corrupt politicians,
wounded soldiers, greedy war profiteers, and other symbols of
Berlin's interwar decline all met with the artist's relentless
gaze, which exposed the core social issues that eventually led to
Germany's extreme nationalist politics. Featuring masterpieces as
well as rarely published works, this book provides further insight
into the artist's creative pinnacle, reached during this critical
and ominous period in German history. Published by The Metropolitan
Museum of Art/Distributed by Yale University Press Exhibition
Schedule: Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart (November 18, 2022-February 26,
2023)
Forgacs examines the development of the Bauhaus school of
architecture and applied design by focusing on the idea of the
Bauhaus, rather than on its artefacts. What gave this idea its
extraordinary powers of survival? Founded in 1919, with the
architect Walter Gropius as its first director, the Bauhaus carried
within it the seeds of conflict from the start. The duration of the
Bauhaus coincides very nearly with that of the Weimar Republic; the
Bauhaus idea - the notion that the artist should be involved in the
technological innovations of mechanization and mass production - is
a concept that was bound to arouse the most passionate feelings. It
is these two strands - personal and political - that Forgacs so
cleverly interweaves. The text has been extensively revised since
its original publication in Hungarian, and an entirely new chapter
has been added on the Bauhaus's Russian analogue, VkhUTEMAS, the
Moscow academy of industrial art.
The artists as explorers: the Expressionist artists Kirchner and
Nolde studied non-Western lifestyles and incorporated them into
their artistic projects. Between "armchair anthropology" practised
in the museums and "field-work anthropology", which also took place
in the colonies, both artists contributed to the construction of an
(imagined) "other", offering an alternative to bourgeois,
"civilised" society in Germany. Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Emil
Nolde both spent time between 1910-11 studying objects and
materials in ethnographic museums, but before long they expanded
their investigations to include travels to colonial regions (Nolde)
and the staging of "exotic" studio environments (Kirchner). The
publication examines how both approaches evolved through an
interplay between art, early German anthropology and colonial
enterprise within the German Empire at the beginning of the 20th
century. It contains not only paintings, drawings, sculptures,
photographs, posters and documents, but also a variety of texts
offering a broad overview as well as relating a specific narrative.
Languages: English, Dutch, Danish
The Routledge Companion to Expressionism in a Transnational Context
is a challenging exploration of the transnational formation,
dissemination, and transformation of expressionism outside of the
German-speaking world, in regions such as Central and Eastern
Europe, the Baltics and Scandinavia, Western and Southern Europe,
North and Latin America, and South Africa, in the first half of the
twentieth century. Comprising a series of essays by an
international group of scholars in the fields of art history and
literary and cultural studies, the volume addresses the
intellectual discussions and artistic developments arising in the
context of the expressionist movement in the various art centers
and cultural regions. The authors also examine the implications of
expressionism in artistic practice and its influence on modern and
contemporary cultural production. Essential for an in-depth
understanding and discussion of expressionism, this volume opens up
new perspectives on developments in the visual arts of this period
and challenges the traditional narratives that have predominantly
focused on artistic styles and national movements.
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