Sale: 380 / Modern Art, June 04. 2011 in Munich Lot 37

 
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff - Mädchen am Tisch


37
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
Mädchen am Tisch, 1921.
Watercolor
Estimate:
€ 60,000 / $ 66,000
Sold:
€ 73,200 / $ 80,520

(incl. surcharge)
Watercolor over reed pen drawing in brown
Signed and dated lower left. Titled on verso. On laid paper. 48,6 x 40 cm (19,1 x 15,7 in), the full sheet

Accompanied by a photo expertise from Prof. Hermann Gerlinger, Würzburg, dated 1 February 2011.

PROVENANCE: Private collection, acquired in the 1950s.

The painter, print-maker and sculptor Karl Schmidt was born at Rottluff near Chemnitz in 1884. His father was a miller. In 1905 he enrolled to study architecture at Dresden Technical University. The year he met Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel and Fritz Bleyl there, he co-founded with them the group of artists known as 'Die Brücke'. Their first joint portfolio of prints appeared in 1906. He outdid his colleagues in insisting on pure primary colors and his Expressionist paintings were dominated by forceful handling of the medium to achieve intensity and brilliance. Until 1912 he often stayed for quite some time in the Dangastermoor near Varel in Oldenburg, where he found a wealth of motifs for his landscape paintings. After moving to Berlin in 1911, he addressed himself to problems of form, developing an increasingly reductive geometric formal language, a development that was interrupted by the outbreak of war. While serving on the Eastern Front, he did a cycle of religious woodcuts in which he tried to come to terms with the horrors of war. It is regarded as his graphic masterpiece. In 1918 he returned to Berlin.

The strong, almost earnest duct in watercolors by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff is dominating of his work from the early years to his later period of creation. Everything is dynamic in his compositions. A drawing, which sets the direction for the composition, is the framework to which all other image elements are subordinate. The strong strokes of the watercolor brush speak their own language, which is, however, not in contrast to the overall concept. Schmidt-Rottluff is one of the few artists of Expressionism that never abandoned his design principles. His oeuvre is of a closeness that cannot be found with many of his contemporaries.

During the 1920s he reverted to the work rhythm of travelling to paint during the summers and working in his studio during the winters. Stays in Pomerania, at Lake Leba in Ticino and in the Taunus Mountains as well as a stint in Rome to study at the German Academy in the Villa Massimo (1930) inspired his mature still lifes and landscapes. In 1937 his work was declared degenerate at the notorious Munich exhibition of 'Degenerate Art'. By 1941 he was forbidden to paint and was expelled from the painters' guild. After the second world war he was appointed to a chair at the (West) Berlin ‘Hochschule für bildende Künste’. His late work links up, as far as motifs are concerned, with his Expressionist phase although his palette is by now more subtle and less intense. In 1956 this renewer of art, who had been an arch revolutionary in his youth, was awarded the highest (West) German distinction, the 'Pour le Mérite' order, and was honored as a classic. The Brücke Museum, which he had endowed with a collection of his works, was inaugurated in 1967. Numerous retrospectives in the Federal Republic paid tribute to this artist, who, as art historians unanimously agree, was one of the most important German Expressionists. [KD].




37
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
Mädchen am Tisch, 1921.
Watercolor
Estimate:
€ 60,000 / $ 66,000
Sold:
€ 73,200 / $ 80,520

(incl. surcharge)