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An accessible introduction to the life and work of this
trailblazing pioneer of early modernism, published to coincide with
a major exhibition at the Royal Academy, London. Paula
Modersohn-Becker is today hailed as one of the great pioneers of
modernism. When she died in 1907 at the age of just 31, she had
completed more than 700 paintings and 1,000 drawings and prints.
Despite selling only a few paintings during her lifetime, her
distinct style, daring subject matter and perseverance in
overcoming barriers to women left a significant artistic mark on
the brief epoch between the old and the new, and paved the way for
the German avant-garde. Uwe M. Schneede, one of the foremost
experts on Modersohn-Becker's work, shows how the artist translated
her life's experiences into her own, very distinctive, pictorial
language. He focuses in particular on her time in Paris, where she
absorbed the luminous palette and expressive brushwork of the
French avantgarde, and which so strongly impacted her ambitions and
artistic trajectory. Schneede's lively narrative is supported by
some 120 illustrations, and peppered throughout with quotations
from Modersohn's letters and diaries.
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Close Up - Berthe Morisot, Mary Cassatt, Paula Modersohn-Becker, Lotte Laserstein, Frida Kahlo, Alice Neel, Marlene Dumas, Cindy Sherman, Elizabeth Peyton (Paperback)
Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel; Theodora Vischer; Text written by Tere Arcq, Hilda Trujillo; Andreas Beyer, …
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The portrait offers the possibility of observation and
introspection, and is at the same time one of the most private and
representative artistic genres. But what distinguishes the
specifically female gaze? On the occasion of the major fall
exhibition 2021 at Fondation Beyeler, this catalog brings together
nine women artists from Europe and America from the beginning of
modernism to the present day, whose works represent an outstanding
contribution to the history of the portrait. The individual view of
the artists on themselves and on their surroundings in the course
of time is expressed. In the catalog, renowned authors explore the
individual artists and their fascinating ways of reflecting on
themselves and on others. The featured artists are Mary Cassatt,
Marlene Dumas, Frida Kahlo, Lotte Laserstein, Paula
Modersohn-Becker, Berthe Morisot, Alice Neel, Elizabeth Peyton, and
Cindy Sherman.
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's move from Dresden to Berlin in 1911 marked
a turning point in his art. Under the influence of the most modern
metropolis in Europe, during the years between 1912 and 1915 the
artist created works whose exaggerated and condensed styl e could
be regarded as a true metaphor for the attitude to life during the
early years of the twentieth century. During this time of rapid
change the capital of the German Empire promised progress and
countless opportunities, but also danger and profound e xistential
fear. The city was not only the centre of industry, which continued
to grow unchecked, but also of increasing motorised traffic and,
with three million inhabitants, it was the biggest "city of
tenement blocks" in Europe. But Berlin was also the metropolis of
the arts, of hedonism, prostitution and accordingly of a sexuality
that could be lived to the full as never before. Berlin vibrated
with challenging energy and intellectual challenges. In this
melting pot of opportunities and risks Kirchner c reated pictures
of breathless, existential directness which he launched unerringly
at the conventions of the Wilhelminian age. The main area of focus
of the publication will lie on this dialectic and the resulting
tension. It will reproduce Kirchner's grea test masterpieces, and
in order to demonstrate the profound changes in his style, a
representative selection of his early works from Dresden will also
be shown alongside the paintings, drawing s and prints from the
time in Berlin.
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