Van Gogh •
Artist Biographies
•
Max Beckmann
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Max Beckmann |
| Birth Year : |
1884 |
| Death Year : |
1950 |
| Country : |
Germany |
Max Beckmann was an expressionist painter and graphic
artist, born in Leipzig, East Germany. He studied at the Weimar School
of Art for three years, before traveling to Florence and to Paris. He was especially impressed by Piero della Francesca, the
French primitives,
Cezanne,
and
Van Gogh. From 1906 to 1914, Beckmann was associated with
the "Berlin Secession" movement, while painting in a distinctively impressionistic manner. His experiences as a medical
corpsman in 1914-15 were such a shock to his sensibilities that when, after a severe illness, he began to paint again, in
1917, his work became infused with the icy bitterness of a reaction to the horrors of war and to the depression of the
postwar years in Germany.
His compositions, in 1920, were strongly defined within spaces confined by harsh lines of contour. His color was limited,
symbolic in tonality, and quite cold. His principal subject, the human being, "the monster of vitality," was presented in
nightmarish scenes of brutally raw living. As the memories of war and and postwar began to fade, this nightmarish quality
changed to one of dreamlike disillusion in his landscapes, his still lives, and in his portraits of bold or occasionally
tender women. His enigmatic portraits of men, or of himself are equally inscrutable.
In 1933 he left Frankfurt for political reasons and went to Berlin where he stayed until 1936. He then went to Amsterdam and
finally, in 1940, to New York where he died ten years later. The paintings from this final phase are freer and broader in
style, simpler in expression, and more varied in their use of color. His subjects are mythical or allegorical and his motifs
are symbolic. He expresses, with a force that is almost physical in impact, the problems of man's existence in a difficult
world.
US
"To do good work one must eat well, be well housed, have one's fling from time to time, smoke one's pipe, and drink one's coffee in peace."