360
Karl Hagemeister
Bewegte See mit gischtenden Wellenkämmen, Um 1912.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 30,000 / $ 33,000 Sold:
€ 131,250 / $ 144,375 (incl. surcharge)
Bewegte See mit gischtenden Wellenkämmen. Um 1912.
Oil on canvas.
Warmt G 513. Signed in lower right. 104 x 162.5 cm (40.9 x 63.9 in).
• Large-size work with an overwhelming power.
• Intensive colors and fascinating technique that anticipate abstract tendencies in painting.
• One-of-a-kind work from the sereies of the "Wave Pictures" the artist executed on the island of Rügen.
PROVENANCE: J. Sucksdorff - Architektur und Antiquitäten, Berlin.
Private collection Berlin.
"I realize that waves can't just be portrayed, even if you used a still photograph as basis for the painting, as a wave like that would just stand still. In order to paint it in motion, you have to meticulously study every detail, the atmophere, the rhythm of the waves, and once you have captured everything, you have to quickly render it with all sensations. Only then will the depiction captivate the observer. Over the last couple of stays on the coast I became more and more convinced that I should exclusively paint the sea and become the master of the ocean – a challenging enterprise, considering that Courbet is the only one who truly captured the sea's infinity and omnipotence."
Quote from: Karl Hagemeister, ex. cat. Galerie Heinemann, Munich 1912, p. 18.
Oil on canvas.
Warmt G 513. Signed in lower right. 104 x 162.5 cm (40.9 x 63.9 in).
• Large-size work with an overwhelming power.
• Intensive colors and fascinating technique that anticipate abstract tendencies in painting.
• One-of-a-kind work from the sereies of the "Wave Pictures" the artist executed on the island of Rügen.
PROVENANCE: J. Sucksdorff - Architektur und Antiquitäten, Berlin.
Private collection Berlin.
"I realize that waves can't just be portrayed, even if you used a still photograph as basis for the painting, as a wave like that would just stand still. In order to paint it in motion, you have to meticulously study every detail, the atmophere, the rhythm of the waves, and once you have captured everything, you have to quickly render it with all sensations. Only then will the depiction captivate the observer. Over the last couple of stays on the coast I became more and more convinced that I should exclusively paint the sea and become the master of the ocean – a challenging enterprise, considering that Courbet is the only one who truly captured the sea's infinity and omnipotence."
Quote from: Karl Hagemeister, ex. cat. Galerie Heinemann, Munich 1912, p. 18.
360
Karl Hagemeister
Bewegte See mit gischtenden Wellenkämmen, Um 1912.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 30,000 / $ 33,000 Sold:
€ 131,250 / $ 144,375 (incl. surcharge)