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German
Expressionism
(1912-1929)
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Graphic
Works from the
Lindenau-Museum, Altenburg, Germany
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February
18 through March 25, 2001
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The Expressionist style was a global phenomenon
in the first half of the twentieth century. Historians agree that
many of the innovations and far-reaching contributions to this style
developed in Germany. German Expressionism from this early period
has been the subject of a vast number of exhibitions and publications.
Yet as this exhibition shows, there are pockets of significant art
activity from this period that have patiently waited to be uncovered.
Dramatic changes in art took
place during the period covered by this exhibition. Time-honored
traditions, including clear representation of the visible world
and standardized notions of beauty, were challenged and changed.
Among the most formidable challenges to the status quo were the
ones put forth by the German Expressionists. A heightened emotional
content, expressed in aggressive colors and daring shapes, is the
main component of this style of art. As the story of twentieth-century
art unfolded, it became clear that without the contributions of
the German Expressionists, art as we now know it would have been
far different.
One of the principal contributions
of German Expressionism as a whole was the revival of printmaking
as a major art form. The Brücke group, the forerunner of the artists
in the current exhibition, set the pace through its elevation of
artist prints (particularly woodcuts) to a major place in art alongside
painting and sculpture. The Dresden artists in this exhibition built
on that legacy with their use of lithography prints made using a
stone technique in which lines initially drawn on a metal plate
are deepened in an acid bath. All of these printmaking processes
involve the application of ink to a block of wood or a plate of
stone or metal. A piece of paper is then placed over the block or
plate and pressure is applied so that the paper, soon to be a print,
picks up the ink.
It is a great pleasure for Oglethorpe
University Museum of Art to host this exhibition of graphic expressionist
works from the Lindenau-Museum in Altenburg, Germany. In our collaboration,
we have relied upon the expertise of Dr. Thomas Matuszak, curator
of the Graphic Department at the Lindenau-Museum. In addition, we
are deeply indebted to Mr. Heinrich Peter Rothmann, the German Consul
General in Atlanta, who originated the idea to present this exhibition
here, and for the valuable assistance given by Dr. Michael Nentwich
of the Goethe-Institut in Atlanta.
Curatorial Statement
In some larger cities after
World War I and the collapse of the Wilhelminian Empire, artists
were banding together to participate in the artistic, aesthetic
and political reformation of Germany. In Dresden in March 1919,
Conrad Felixmüller gathered around him the painters and graphic
artists Will Heckrott, Laser Segall, Otto Dix, Otto Schubert and
Constantin von Mitschke-Collande, as well as the architect Hugo
Zehder, to found the Dresden Secession Group -- 1919. Shortly thereafter,
the group had its first exhibition at the gallery Emil Richter.
In the group's manifesto it is stated that "the founding of the
group is a natural outgrowth of the reawakened, innermost yearning
to depart forever from the old means and ways and to find, while
preserving absolutely the freedom of personality, new expressions
for the new world surrounding us."
The Dresden Secession Group
- 1919 was of short duration. In 1925, the group presented its last
collective exhibition. The failure was not alone the result of its
own overrated claim or of their limited means. Constantly changing
memberships would not allow for a homogeneous sense of community.
Agreement about artistic goals was achieved at the beginning, but
differences in their approach led to the eventual dissolution of
the group.
Not all the artists represented
here were members of the Dresden Secession Group - 1919, thought
they were either very close to it, sympathized with their views,
or pursued similar ideas in other organizations. Central to the
exhibition are the works by Conrad Felixmüller; they cover thematically
as well as stylistically the largest range: Man in his surroundings,
motifs from the work world, and portraits. As to the enormous war
complex, the artists approach it in different ways -- partly dealing
with the subject in blunt realism, partly in allegorical reference
to the Passion of Christ.
These artists were also exploring
the portrait tradition as an outlet for their feelings about contemporary
life. Constantin von Mitscheke-Collande reacted most strongly to
the social changes with his woodcut cycle The Ecstatic Way, a series
that was based on an essay by Walther Georg Hartmann. The topics
of Eros and sex, of pleasure and vice, of wantonness and force,
of yearning and fulfillment, in their contradictory tension-laden
unity, were repeated in various combinations in these artworks.
Lasar Segall introduced motifs
from the world of Eastern European Jews to this selection. These
prints proclaim faith in a world in the making and simultaneously
make latent threats, which a short time later would develop a destructive
potential in Germany.
Thomas Matuszak, Curator Lindenau-Museum
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