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A beautifully illustrated examination of the women artists whose
inspired search for artistic integrity and equality influenced
Expressionist avant-garde culture Women Artists in Expressionism
explores how women negotiated the competitive world of modern art
during the late Wilhelmine and early Weimar periods in Germany.
Their stories challenge predominantly male-oriented narratives of
Expressionism and shed light on the divergent artistic responses of
women to the dramatic events of the early twentieth century.
Shulamith Behr shows how the posthumous critical reception of Paula
Modersohn-Becker cast her as a prime agent of the feminization of
the movement, and how Kathe Kollwitz used printmaking as a vehicle
for technical innovation and sociopolitical commentary. She looks
at the dynamic relationship between Marianne Werefkin and Gabriele
Mu nter, whose different paths in life led them to the Blaue
Reiter, a group of Expressionist artists that included Wassily
Kandinsky and Paul Klee. Behr examines Nell Walden's role as an
influential art dealer, collector, and artist, who promoted women
Expressionists during the First World War, and discusses how Dutch
artist Jacoba van Heemskerck's spiritual abstraction earned her the
status of an honorary German Expressionist. She demonstrates how
figures such as Rosa Schapire and Johanna Ey contributed to the
development of the movement as spectators, critics, and collectors
of male avant-gardism. Richly illustrated, Women Artists in
Expressionism is a women-centered history that reveals the
importance of emancipative ideals to the shaping of modernity and
the avant-garde.
Apocalypse, the city, war, religion, the portrait, exile and
existential trauma - Ludwig Meidner (1884-1966) is regarded as one
of the outstanding artists of German Expressionism. With the
accuracy of a seismograph he recorded in his pictorial and literary
works the shocks which reverberated through his time. To mark the
50th anniversary of the death of the Jewish artist Ludwig Meidner
attention has been focused on the works produced during his period
of exile in London between 1939 and 1953 - sketchbooks,
watercolours and charcoal and chalk drawings produced under the
most difficult conditions. They represent an intense mixture of
internal experience and contemporary commentary. With merciless
directness and symbolic condensation the works tell of terror,
isolation, persecution and destruction as well as a grotesquely
absurd world which Meidner spotlighted in an idiosyncratic way,
combining mockery with mordant humour and sarcasm with bizarre
exaggeration.
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