253
Ernst Barlach
Der Geistkämpfer, 1928.
Bronze
Estimate:
€ 150,000 / $ 165,000 Sold:
€ 183,000 / $ 201,300 (incl. surcharge)
Lot: 253
Ernst Barlach
1870 Wedel/Holstein - 1938 Rostock
Der Geistkämpfer. 1928/1937.
Bronze with brown patina.
Laur 428 1/1 (of 2/2). With name in lower right on base. 119,3 x 54 x 16,6 cm (46,9 x 21,2 x 6,5 in)
Diminished cast after a gypsum model on a scale of 1:4. Masterly executed with an even patina. According to artnet, there has not been a cast of the 'Geistkämpfer' on the international auction market for the last 25 years.
This is presumably one of the two casts made in the artist's lifetime in 1937, according to the kind information of the Ernst Barlach licence administration.
PROVENANCE: Private collection Mülheim a.d. Ruhr (previous owner acquired the work directly from the artist).
LITERATURE: Friedrich Schult, Ernst Barlach, Das plastische Werk, Hamburg 1960.
Ernst Barlach, Plastiken, Handzeichnungen und Autographen. Foundation Hermann F. Reemtsma. Ernst Barlach Haus, Hamburg 1977, no. 49.
Ernst Barlach, Denkzeichen. Schleswig-Holsteinisches Landesmuseum Schloß Gottorf, Schleswig 1989, no. 46.
Jürgen Fitschen/Volker Probst. Die Gemeinschaft der Heiligen. Der Figurenzyklus an der Katharinenkirche zu Lübeck und das monumentale Werk Ernst Barlachs. Gerhard Marcks Haus, Bremen/Ernst Barlach Stiftung Güstrow 2001, pp. 145f., no. 40.
Jürgen Doppelstein/Heike Stockhaus, Ernst Barlach, Mystiker der Moderne. Ernst Barlach Gesellschaft Hamburg/Hauptkirche St. Katharinen Hamburg, Hamburg 2003, p. 259.
Volker Probst, Ernst Barlach, Plastiken und Graphik. Schloss der pommerschen Herzöge, Stettin 2005, no. 14.
Ernst Barlach, Retrospective. The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto/The University Art Museum, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music/Yamanashi Prefecturial Museum of Art, Kofu, Kyoto 2006, no. 144.
The north German sculptor and printmaker Ernst Barlach began his training in Hamburg, where he attended a trade school from 1888. He studied from 1891 at the Dresden Academy, where he continued his training in sculpture. Barlach’s academic training was consolidated by stays in Paris for study in 1895 and 1897. A trip Barlach took to Russia in 1906 would exert a lasting formative influence on his work. From then on, his impressions of Russian vernacular art would be distilled into the powerfully folkloric style of his sculpture. In 1910 Barlach settled in Güstrow. He had his first exhibition at Paul Cassirer’s gallery in Berlin in 1917. By 1919 Barlach had been accepted as a full member of the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin.
Taking up a commission from the city of Kiel, for which he had already created a monument honouring the war dead, Ernst Barlach began doing sketches as designs for the “Spirit Fighter” set up outside St Nicholas’. On the thinking behind this bronze statue that figures so prominently in Barlach’s œuvre, Elisabeth Laur writes: “Even though the figure group is oriented towards medieval representations of St Michael, Barlach has depicted neither hand-to-hand combat nor a triumphant victor. The sword is not actively turned against the animal. The angel’s pose in fact suggests that it is hovering over the animal’s back; yet it appears unstable at the same time, at least hardly as the pose of a dominant figure. The animal is subordinate to the ‘Fighter’ and its head is submissively lowered. Nevertheless, it is necessary in its function as a support; neither of the two figures can stand alone. Hence the group cannot be interpreted unequivocally as the battle of good against evil. It reflects the idea of two irreconcilable principles confronting each other [...]” (Laur, p. 36). The astringent aesthetic of this composition consists, on the one hand, in its monumentality, which is just as apparent in the replica on a small scale, and the balance achieved in its sculptural elements. Beginning with the legs of the animal and on over the angel’s feet to the tip of the sword, Barlach has created an intellectual focus that is echoed in the proportions of the sculpture.
In 1933 Barlach was still in a position to be awarded the Pour le mérit\b\ul e decoration. Only four years later, however, his works were systematically removed from museums, churches and public spaces. Today Ernst Barlach is acclaimed as one of the most important Classical Modern sculptors. Outstanding examples of his Expressionist figures in wood and bronze are on view in Güstrow Cathedral, in St Elisabeth’s in Marburg and at the Berlin Nationalgalerie. Barlach’s studio and house in Güstrow are today open to the public as a museum. [KD].
In good condition. At the top of the sword with a tiny rubbing mark.
EUR: 150.000 - 250.000 DIFF.(19%)
US$: 204.600 - 341.000
Ernst Barlach
1870 Wedel/Holstein - 1938 Rostock
Der Geistkämpfer. 1928/1937.
Bronze with brown patina.
Laur 428 1/1 (of 2/2). With name in lower right on base. 119,3 x 54 x 16,6 cm (46,9 x 21,2 x 6,5 in)
Diminished cast after a gypsum model on a scale of 1:4. Masterly executed with an even patina. According to artnet, there has not been a cast of the 'Geistkämpfer' on the international auction market for the last 25 years.
This is presumably one of the two casts made in the artist's lifetime in 1937, according to the kind information of the Ernst Barlach licence administration.
PROVENANCE: Private collection Mülheim a.d. Ruhr (previous owner acquired the work directly from the artist).
LITERATURE: Friedrich Schult, Ernst Barlach, Das plastische Werk, Hamburg 1960.
Ernst Barlach, Plastiken, Handzeichnungen und Autographen. Foundation Hermann F. Reemtsma. Ernst Barlach Haus, Hamburg 1977, no. 49.
Ernst Barlach, Denkzeichen. Schleswig-Holsteinisches Landesmuseum Schloß Gottorf, Schleswig 1989, no. 46.
Jürgen Fitschen/Volker Probst. Die Gemeinschaft der Heiligen. Der Figurenzyklus an der Katharinenkirche zu Lübeck und das monumentale Werk Ernst Barlachs. Gerhard Marcks Haus, Bremen/Ernst Barlach Stiftung Güstrow 2001, pp. 145f., no. 40.
Jürgen Doppelstein/Heike Stockhaus, Ernst Barlach, Mystiker der Moderne. Ernst Barlach Gesellschaft Hamburg/Hauptkirche St. Katharinen Hamburg, Hamburg 2003, p. 259.
Volker Probst, Ernst Barlach, Plastiken und Graphik. Schloss der pommerschen Herzöge, Stettin 2005, no. 14.
Ernst Barlach, Retrospective. The National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto/The University Art Museum, Tokyo National University of Fine Arts and Music/Yamanashi Prefecturial Museum of Art, Kofu, Kyoto 2006, no. 144.
The north German sculptor and printmaker Ernst Barlach began his training in Hamburg, where he attended a trade school from 1888. He studied from 1891 at the Dresden Academy, where he continued his training in sculpture. Barlach’s academic training was consolidated by stays in Paris for study in 1895 and 1897. A trip Barlach took to Russia in 1906 would exert a lasting formative influence on his work. From then on, his impressions of Russian vernacular art would be distilled into the powerfully folkloric style of his sculpture. In 1910 Barlach settled in Güstrow. He had his first exhibition at Paul Cassirer’s gallery in Berlin in 1917. By 1919 Barlach had been accepted as a full member of the Prussian Academy of Arts in Berlin.
Taking up a commission from the city of Kiel, for which he had already created a monument honouring the war dead, Ernst Barlach began doing sketches as designs for the “Spirit Fighter” set up outside St Nicholas’. On the thinking behind this bronze statue that figures so prominently in Barlach’s œuvre, Elisabeth Laur writes: “Even though the figure group is oriented towards medieval representations of St Michael, Barlach has depicted neither hand-to-hand combat nor a triumphant victor. The sword is not actively turned against the animal. The angel’s pose in fact suggests that it is hovering over the animal’s back; yet it appears unstable at the same time, at least hardly as the pose of a dominant figure. The animal is subordinate to the ‘Fighter’ and its head is submissively lowered. Nevertheless, it is necessary in its function as a support; neither of the two figures can stand alone. Hence the group cannot be interpreted unequivocally as the battle of good against evil. It reflects the idea of two irreconcilable principles confronting each other [...]” (Laur, p. 36). The astringent aesthetic of this composition consists, on the one hand, in its monumentality, which is just as apparent in the replica on a small scale, and the balance achieved in its sculptural elements. Beginning with the legs of the animal and on over the angel’s feet to the tip of the sword, Barlach has created an intellectual focus that is echoed in the proportions of the sculpture.
In 1933 Barlach was still in a position to be awarded the Pour le mérit\b\ul e decoration. Only four years later, however, his works were systematically removed from museums, churches and public spaces. Today Ernst Barlach is acclaimed as one of the most important Classical Modern sculptors. Outstanding examples of his Expressionist figures in wood and bronze are on view in Güstrow Cathedral, in St Elisabeth’s in Marburg and at the Berlin Nationalgalerie. Barlach’s studio and house in Güstrow are today open to the public as a museum. [KD].
In good condition. At the top of the sword with a tiny rubbing mark.
EUR: 150.000 - 250.000 DIFF.(19%)
US$: 204.600 - 341.000
253
Ernst Barlach
Der Geistkämpfer, 1928.
Bronze
Estimate:
€ 150,000 / $ 165,000 Sold:
€ 183,000 / $ 201,300 (incl. surcharge)