5 Expressionist Artists You Should Know
The purpose of art for a group of avant-garde individuals at the turn of the 20th century was no longer the realistic rendition of the natural world,...
Guest Profile 29 February 2024
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner was one of the most prominent painters of German Expressionism. Furthermore, he also was one of the founders of Die Brücke! As an artist, he focused both on painting and printmaking. Unfortunately, in the 1930s his work was considered degenerate by the Nazis and many pieces were destroyed. Let’s discover some of the artworks that survived!
Before all the horrible things that happened, Kirchner produced many pieces of art. His Expressionistic works represented a powerful reaction against the boring, and in those times outdated, Impressionism which was dominant in German painting when he first emerged. For Kirchner, Impressionism was nothing more than a symbol of the staid civility of bourgeois life. However, what is interesting is that he chose to rework the typical Impressionist motif – ballerinas.
Kirchner always denied that he was influenced by other artists but of course, he had his favorite painters. Henri Matisse and Edvard Munch were clearly important in shaping his style. In 1898, Kirchner was impressed by the prints of German Renaissance artists, especially those of Albrecht Dürer. Also, his fellow artists from Die Brücke were particularly significant in directing his intense and raw palette, encouraging him to use flat areas of unbroken, often unmixed color and simplified forms. This was only intensified when he discovered African and Polynesian art in 1904.
Much of Kirchner’s work shows his interest in malevolence and eroticism. Kirchner loved the modern vibe of the early years of the 20th century, the wild rhythm of crowded cities, and fashionable women. During the months leading up to the Great War, following the breakup of the Die Brücke in 1913, Kirchner painted numerous Strassenszenen, or street scenes. These works earned him well-deserved recognition as an Expressionist painter of the city. He was particularly fascinated by circus artists, cabaret dancers, and sex workers, whose existence on the fringes of society belonged, in Nietzschean terms, to the same world as the visual arts.
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