Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Oct 10, 2022 · German expressionism : art and society. Publication date. 1997. Topics. Expressionism (Art) -- Germany -- Exhibitions, Art, German -- Exhibitions, Art and society -- Germany -- History -- 20th century -- Exhibitions. Publisher.

  2. Expressionism. Edvard Munch, The Scream, c. 1893, oil, tempera and pastel on cardboard, 91 × 73 cm, National Gallery of Norway, inspired 20th-century expressionists. Expressionism is a modernist movement, initially in poetry and painting, originating in Northern Europe around the beginning of the 20th century.

  3. People also ask

  4. Feb 9, 2024 · 1. It originated with two collectives looking for new art styles. A group of aspiring artists in Dresden, Germany, at the beginning of the 20th century found common cause. Erich Heckel, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, and Fritz Bleyl believed that art should reflect and cause emotions and states of mind.

  5. silent film. German expressionist cinema was a part of several related creative movements in Germany in the early 20th century that reached a peak in Berlin during the 1920s. These developments were part of a larger Expressionist movement in north and central European culture in fields such as architecture, dance, painting, sculpture and cinema .

  6. book, Expressionism, which appeared in Munich in 1914, he declared that the task of the observer of Expressionist works was not "to read in them what the painting 'repre- sents', to reconstruct in the mind's eye the original picture of reality from the colour analysis of that reality; rather, it is to gain access to the feeling out

  7. Modern Art’s fine show “German Expressionism: The Graphic Impulse,” examines a longer time—from 1905, when Die Bruecke movement came into being, into the 1920s, after the devastations of the First World War.

  8. Art Term. German expressionism was an early twentieth century German art movement that emphasized the artist's inner feelings or ideas over replicating reality, and was characterised by simplified shapes, bright colours and gestural marks or brushstrokes. Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. Dr Rosa Schapire (1919) Tate. © DACS, 2024.

  1. People also search for