Expressionism, movement in the arts
emphasizing subjective feelings and emotions, which developed
during the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a reaction against
academic standards that had prevailed in Europe since the Renaissance
(14th century to 17th century). The subjects of expressionist
works were frequently exaggerated, distorted, or otherwise altered.
The term expressionism was first applied
to painting in 1911 but the movement's tenets were earlier exemplified
by 19th-century artists, especially Dutch painter Vincent van
Gogh, French artist Paul Gauguin, and Norwegian painter Edvard
Munch, all of whom used violent colors and exaggerated lines
to obtain intense emotional expression. The most important expressionist
group was the German school, originated by a Dresden group called
Die Brücke, which included painters Ernst Ludwig Kirchner,
Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Emil Nolde, Max Pechstein,
and Otto Müller. Another group, in Munich, called Der Blaue
Reiter, included German painters Franz Marc, August Macke, and
Heinrich Campendonk; Swiss artist Paul Klee; and Russian painter
Wassily Kandinsky. Other expressionists included Austrian painter
Oskar Kokoschka, French artist Georges Rouault, Lithuanian-born
French painter Chaïm Soutine, Bulgarian-born French painter
Jules Pascin, and American painter Max Weber (see Modern Art
and Architecture). Another more cynical phase of German expressionism
called Die Neue Sachlichkeit (The New Objectivity) was founded
by Otto Dix and George Grosz.
The average Expressionists believed
that every part of man's personality and being is in essence,
a form of expression. To them, everything was an expression;
eating, sleeping, and without a doubt, painting. The Expressionists
felt persuaded by art. They believed that art was a chief means
of expression between one person to another-in this case, the
artists and the spectator. Like the Cubists, Expressionists felt
the most important facet in a painting was the subject matter.
Subject matter was the center of an emotional charge to be felt
by the artist and the spectator.
The Expressionists believed that as
long as the emotional surge between the artist and spectator
took place, the subject matter had little importance. Expressionism
stipulated that above all, an emotional expression needed to
take place. Unlike most artists from other movements who often
emphasized the subject matter, but the Expressionists discovered
that the subject matter could be abandoned all together. If the
artist used rich deep colors accompanied by large definite brushstrokes,
then the painting could altogether exist as a free entity.
While the above is a basic understanding
of the Expressionists' beliefs, it's also important to mention
that many artists had individual styles of their own. Two distinct
groups emerged out of the Expressionist movement. They include
the Die Brucke group, and the group Der Blaue Reiter. The first
group was founded in 1912 and found inspiration in medieval German
sculpture. They appreciated sculpture from Africa, as well as
oceanic sculpture. Like the Fauvists, they found inspiration
in a primitive form, but did not focus on naturalism, but primitivism.
In addition, like the Fauves, they had no "theories".
They did however aim clearly to show that nature was an obsolete
form to portray, and they hoped that others would join and support
their anti-nature campaign.
The second group of Expressionists
called themselves Der Blaue Reiter. They were painters mainly
from Munich, Germany. The members in this group were more spiritually
inclined than the Die Brucke group; they had a close tie with
theosophy. By connecting some psychological meaning, and some
color thematics, the group hoped to combine art with the human
spirit. They believed that given the right human spirit, art
can represent reality, and reality can represent art.
In order to better analyze the Expressionists
"theory", the following quote explains a personal statement
of how their art is typified.
"This is what I saw, imagined,
experienced; this is how it was for me; this is how I felt about
it. I, the artist, offer you this experience because as artist
I am sensitized to a special degree and devote my life to this
thin-skinned experience and to finding ways of capturing it to
you, my public. I am one, unique through a part of mankind. You
are many; most of your time, your education and your work, if
not leisure too, is designed to restrain you experience, to thicken
your skin. How shall I address you? Not through the conventions
of European art, worn smooth with endless use; they no longer
connect with life and do not permit me to set down my personal
apprehension of it. Strong colors, emphatic rather than then
accurate representation and especially distortion in my delineation
of figures will catch your attention but may also numb your responses
by making too strong an assault. I handle these colors daily
and they don't bother me; the drawing that strikes you as incompetent
is how I want it. Yet can you learn to read it, respond to it,
especially since I have to adapt my manner continually to changes
in my situation and myself? I want you to use my art, to counter
with it the deadening weight of urban life. Indeed my insistence
on self-centered art is only justified if it helps you to discover
your true self, but, in order to reveal myself, I have had to
abandon what shared visual language there was as a link between
us. "
Expressionist Architecture
As with Expressionist painting Expressionist
architecture developed in the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries out of the same social tensions that led to the First
World War. Expressionism flourished most strongly in the German
speaking parts of Europe. According to Pehnt Expressionism died
away at the end of world war one as it was idewntified with the
same dark subconscious forces that led to the war itself. However
this position denies the later development of major expressionist
works by, for example Hans Scharoun and the continuing Expressionist
work of architects like Gottfried and Domenikus Böhm. Three
major German architects of the period associated with the expressionist
movement were Bruno Taut, Hans Scharoun and Erich Mendelsohn,
the latter chiefly for his early drawings and the iconic Einstein
Tower.
Architect
Bruno Taut
Great Buildings Online
Biography
(b. Konigsberg, Germany 1880; d. Istanbul,
Turkey 1938)
Bruno Taut was born in Konigsberg,
Germany in 1880. He trained in Konigsberg and Berlin-Charlottenburg
before he joined Theodor Fischer's office in Stuttgart. He opened
his own office in Berlin in 1910 where he maintained a busy practice
until the advent of the First World War. After the war, Taut's
theories and designs marked him as a leader in architectural
innovation. In 1918 he accepted chairmanship of the Arbeitstrat
fur Kunst. A year later he published drawings depicting a visionary
Utopia under the title Alpine Architektur.
In 1920 Taut issued his Expressionist
supplement Fruhlicht as as part of a Berlin planning magazine.
The next year, after he accepted a position as city architect
for Berlin, Taut published a "Glass Chain" publication.
In 1923 he returned to Berlin where he worked in partnership
with Franz Hoffman and his brother Max Taut. He produced his
book Modern Architecture in 1930 for the Studio Press.
In the late 1920s Taut gained recognition
as a leader of the 'New Objective' architecture. He left Germany
for the USSR in 1932. A year later he moved to Japan where he
stayed until 1936. Taut died in Istanbul in 1938.
Dennis Sharp. The Illustrated Encyclopedia
of Architects and Architecture. New York: Quatro Publishing,
1991. ISBN 0-8230-2539-X. NA40.I45. p151.
Architect
Hans Scharoun
Great Buildings Online
Biography
(b. Bremen, Germany 1893; d. Berlin,
Germany 1972)
Hans Scharoun was born in Bremen, Germany
in 1893. He studied architecture in Berlin and after World War
I helped reconstruct East Prussia. He joined Bruno Taut's Expressionist
circle and contributed to the 'Glass Chain' correspondence. His
lifelong commitment to socialism dates from this time.
Although Scharoun remained active in
architecture circles, he did not build until late in the decade
because of the economic depression following the war. The designs
from this period exhibit the development of dynamic interior
spaces which characterized his later work.
During World War II Scharoun remained
in Germany where he participated in Haring's art school Kunst
und Werk. In 1955 he helped re-established the Berlin Arts Academy.
Although he won many competitions in this time, few of his designs
were actually built.
In 1963 Scharoun built his first major
building, the Philharmonie in Berlin. Because of this building,
he gained a wave of new commissions. In most of his later works,
Scharoun displayed an aggressive articulation of parts. He felt
the parts of a building had to be like 'individuals in a democracy'
who contribute to the whole while retaining their own identities.
Scharoun died in Berlin in 1972.
Dennis Sharp. The Illustrated Encyclopedia
of Architects and Architecture. New York: Quatro Publishing,
1991. ISBN 0-8230-2539-X. NA40.I45. p135-136.
Architect
Erich Mendelsohn
Great Buildings Online
Biography
(b. Allenstein, East Prussia 1887;
d. San Francisco, California 1953)
Erich Mendelsohn was born in Allenstein,
East Prussia (now Poland) in 1887. He studied in Berlin and Munich
where he became involved with Expressionism. These early experiences
generated a personal philosophy of "Dynamism" that
demonstrated an attitude that was both expressionistic and personal
in nature.
Mendelsohn used no historical precedents
in formulating his designs. As a result, his early buildings
avoid the eclectic borrowing that mark so many of his contemporaries.
Indeed, his architectural ideas were derived from expressionistic
sketches and romantic symbolism which recognized that the qualities
of modern building materials should dictate a new architecture.
In later designs, Mendehlson moved away from his earlier expressionist
architecture, designing a series of buildings in a more linear
fashion.
In 1933, Mendehlson fled from Nazi
Germany to England where he gained citizenship. He acted as a
design partner with Serge Chermayeff until 1939 when he moved
to Palestine. In 1941 he moved to the U.S. where he established
a successful general practice. While practicing, he lectured
to students and wrote articles for newspapers and magazines.
Dennis Sharp. The Illustrated Encyclopedia
of Architects and Architecture. New York: Quatro Publishing,
1991. ISBN 0-8230-2539-X. NA40.I45. p106-107.
Dutch Expressionist Architecture
The Dutch expressionists, known as
the Amsterdam School, had as their theoretical vehicle the journal
"Vendingen" [The Turning] and worked mainly in brick.
The major figure in Dutch Expressionist
architecture was Michel de Klerk.
Architect Michel de Klerk
Great Buildings Online
Biography
(b. Amsterdam, Netherlands 1884; d.
Amsterdam 1934)
Michel de Klerk was born in Amsterdam
in 1884. He trained as an architect in the office of Eduard Cuypers
from 1898 to 1910. From 1913 to 1923 he was involved with the
"expressionistic" Amsterdam School. Although he resolutely
refused to act as leader of the School, his contemporaries acknowledged
his pre-eminent position.
Like most Dutch architects of his time
he was influenced by H.P. Berlage. In addition, he had a personal
interest in the the English Arts & Crafts Movement. Reflecting
influences of both the Amsterdam School and the "Arts &
Crafts" movement, De Klerk's architecture contained impressionistic
elements and artistic craftsmanship of the highest order.
De Klerk died in Amsterdam in 1939.
Dennis Sharp. The Illustrated Encyclopedia
of Architects and Architecture. New York: Quatro Publishing,
1991. ISBN 0-8230-2539-X. NA40.I45. p88
Return
to Modern in Melbourne 30's & 40's text