In
the north of Europe, the Fauves' celebration of color was pushed to new
emotional and psychological depths. Expressionism, as it was generally known,
developed almost simultaneously in different countries from about 1905.
Characterized by heightened, symbolic colors and exaggerated imagery, it was
German Expressionism in particular that tended to dwell on the darker, sinister
aspects of the human psyche.
The
term ``Expressionism'' can be used to describe various art forms but, in its
broadest sense, it is used to describe any art that raises subjective feelings
above objective observations. The paintings aim to reflect the artists's state
of mind rather than the reality of the external world. The German Expressionist
movement began in 1905 with artists such as Kirchner and Nolde, who favored the
Fauvist style of bright colors but also added stronger linear effects and
harsher outlines.
Although
Expressionism developed a distinctly German character, the Frenchman, Georges
Rouault (1871-1958), links the decorative effects of Fauvism in France with the
symbolic color of German Expressionism. Rouault trained with Matisse at
Moreau's academy and exhibited with the Fauves, but his palette of colors and
profound subject matter place him as an early, if isolated Expressionist. His
work has been described as ``Fauvism with dark glasses''.
Rouault
was a deeply religious man and some consider him the greatest religious artist
of the 20th century. He began his career apprenticed to a stained-glass worker,
and his love of harsh, binding outlines containing a radiance of color gives
poignancy to his paintings of whores and fools. He himself does not judge them,
though the terrible compassion with which he shows his wretched figures makes a
powerful impression: Prostitute at Her Mirror (1906; 70 x 60 cm
(27 1/2 x 23 1/2 in)) is a savage indictment of human cruelty. She is a
travesty of feminity, although poverty drives her still to prink miserably
before her mirror in the hope of work. Yet the picture does not depress, but
holds out hope of redemption. Strangely enough, this work is for Rouault-- if
not exactly a religious picture-- at least a profoundly moral one. She is a sad
female version of his tortured Christs, a figure mocked and scorned, held in
disrepute.
The bridge to the future
Die
Brücke (The Bridge) was the first of two Expressionist movements that
emerged in Germany in the early decades of the 20th century. In 1905 a group of
German Expressionist artists came together in Dresden and took that name chosen
by Schmidt-Rottluff to indicate their faith in the art of the future, towards
which their work would serve as a bridge. In practice they were not a cohesive
group, and their art became an angst-ridden type of Expressionism. The
achievement that had the most lasting value was their revival of graphic arts,
in particular, the woodcut using bold and simplified forms.
The
artists of Die Brücke drew inspiration from van Gogh, Gauguin and
primitive art. Munch was also a strong influence, having exhibited his art in
Berlin from 1892. Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938), the leading spirit of Die
Brücke, wanted German art to be a bridge to the future. He insisted that
the group, which included Erich Heckel (1883-1970) and Karl Schmidt-Rottluf
(1884-1976), ``express inner convictions... with sincerity and spontaneity''.
Even
at their wildest, the Fauves had retained a sense of harmony and design, but
Die Brücke abandoned such restraint. They used images of the modern city
to convey a hostile, alienating world, with distorted figures and colors.
Kirchner does just this in Berlin Street Scene (1913; 121 x 95 cm
(47 1/2 x 37 1/2 in)), where the shrill colors and jagged hysteria of his own
vision flash forth uneasily. There is a powerful sense of violence, contained
with difficulty, in much of their art. Emil Nolde (1867-1956), briefly
associated with Die Brücke, was a more profound Expressionist who worked
in isolation for much of his career. His interest in primitive art and sensual
color led him to paint some remarkable pictures with dynamic energy, simple
rhythms, and visual tension. He could even illuminate the marshes of his native
Germany with dramatic clashes of stunning color. Yet Early Evening
(1916; 74 x 101 cm (29 x 39 1/2 in)) is not mere drama: light glimmers over the
distance with an exhilarating sense of space.
Die
Brücke collapsed as the inner convictions of each artist began to differ,
but arguably the greatest German artist of the time was Max Beckmann
(1884-1950). Working independently, he constructed his own bridge, to link the
objective truthfulness of great artists of the past with his own subjective
emotions. Like some other Expressionists, he served in World War I and suffered
unbearable depression and hallucinations as a result. His work reflects his
stress through its sheer intensity: cruel, brutal images are held still by
solid colors and flat, heavy shapes to give an almost timeless quality. Such an
unshakeable certainty of vision meant that he was hated by the Nazis, and he
ended his days in the United States, a lonely force for good. He is perhaps
just discernible as a descendant of Dürer in his love of self-portraits
and blend of the clumsy and suave with which he imagines himself: in Self-Portrait
(1944; 95 x 60 cm (37 1/2 x 23 1/2 in)), he looks out, not at himself, but at
us, with a prophetic urgency.
Список
литературы
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