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EXPRESSIONISM

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Cupid at the Masquerade Ball by Franz von Stuck. The Beginning of Expressionism ... his face, stripped by death of that earthly patina which masks the living soul. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EXPRESSIONISM


1
EXPRESSIONISM
  • Stable by Franz Marc

2
What is Expressionism?
  • Cupid at the Masquerade Ball by Franz von
    Stuck

3
The Beginning of Expressionism
  • Squares with Concentric Circles
  • by Wassily Kandinsky

4
Die Brücke
  • (face)Selbstbildnis by Karl Schmidt
  • (tree) Bluhende Zweige by Erich Heckel
  • (mountains) Sertig Valley by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

5
Der Blaue Reiter
  • Alexei Jawlensky
  • Mit dem Schwarzen Bogen by Wassily Kandinsky
  • Gabriele Munter
  • Blue Horse by Franz Marc

6
Major characteristics
  • Madonna by Edvard Munch
  • Dr. Rosa Schapire by Karl Schmidt-Rottluf
  • Prophet by Emil Nolde

7
Artists painters
  • Three Cats by Franz Marc

8
Literature
  • Franz Kafka
  • I am separated from all things by a hollow
    space, and I do not even reach to its boundaries

9
Ernst Toller
  • I Was a German (1933)I saw the dead without
    really seeing them. As a boy I used to go to the
    Chamber of Horrors at the annual fair, to look at
    the wax figures of Emperors and Kings, of heroes
    and murderers of the day. The dead now had that
    same unreality, which shocks without arousing
    pity. I stood in the trench cutting into the
    earth with my pick. The point got stuck, and I
    heaved and pulled it out with a jerk. When it
    came a slimy, shapeless bundle, and when I bent
    down to look I saw that wound round my pick were
    human entrails. A dead man was buried there. A
    dead man. What made me pause then? Why did
    those words so startle me? They closed upon my
    brain like a vice they choked my throat and
    chilled my heart. Three words, like any other
    three words. A dead man. I tried to thrust the
    words out of my mind what was there about them
    that they should so overwhelm me? And suddenly,
    like light in darkness, the real truth broke in
    upon me the simple fact of Man, which I had
    forgotten, which had lain deep buried and out of
    sight the idea of community, of unity. A dead
    man. Not a dead Frenchman. Not a dead German. A
    dead man. All these corpses had been men all
    these corpses had breathed as I breathed they
    had a father, a mother, a woman whom they loved,
    a piece of land which was theirs, faces which
    expressed their joys and their sufferings, eyes
    which had known the light of day and the colour
    of the sky. At that moment of realization I knew
    that I had been blind because I had wished not to
    see it was only then that I realised, at last,
    that all these dead men, French and Germans, were
    brothers, and I was the brother of them all.
    After that I could never pass a dead man
    without stopping to gaze on his face, stripped by
    death of that earthly patina which masks the
    living soul. And I would ask, who were you? Where
    was your home? Who is mourning for you now? But I
    never asked who was to blame. Each had defended
    his own country the Germans Germany, the
    Frenchmen France they had done their duty.

10
Music
  • Alban Berg
  • Opus 1 7
  • Lulu
  • Four-oart Canon
  • Der Wein
  • And more
  • Arnold Schönberg (1874-1951)
  • Opus 1-50
  • Gurrelieder
  • Die Jakobsleiter
  • Moses und Aron

11
Architecture
  • The Einstein Tower in Postdam, Germany
  • Designed by Eric Mendelsohn

12
Film
  • F.W. Murnaus Nosferatu (1922)

13
  • "An Expressionist wishes, above all, to express
    himself sic....An Expressionist rejects
    immediate perception and builds on more complex
    psychic structures.... Impressions and mental
    images pass through his soul as through a filter
    which rids them of all substantial accretions to
    produce their clear essence ...and are
    assimilated and condense into more general forms,
    into types, which he transcribes through simple
    short-hand formulae and symbols." Antonin
    Matejcek
  • Gelbe Kuh by Franz Marc

14
  • The artist expresses only what he has within
    himself, not what he sees with his eyes
  • Alexej von Jawlensky (1864-1941), Russian painter

15
Bibliography
  • http//www.artlex.com/ArtLex/e/Expressionism.html
  • http//www.artmovements.co.uk/expressionism.htm
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expressionism
  • http//www.artcyclopedia.com/history/expressionism
    .html
  • http//www.reference.com/browse/wiki/Expressionism
  • http//www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/tl/20th/expression
    ism.html
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