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True to our modus operandi, this time I have chosen a relatively
unknown German painter, Caspar
David Friedrich (1774-1840),
to represent the huge literary, artistic, philosophical and
musical movement that flourished in Europe between
the middle of the 18th and 19th centuries: Romanticism.
My reasons include the fact that I could not think of an artwork
- actually a master piece - that
better depicts the Romantic view and goals than his precious
painting, Wanderer
above the Sea of Fog (1818,
see below). In it, the wandering character (the artist himself,
who self-portrayed in this picture) invites the viewer to look
at the world through the lens of his own perception. It is not
exaggerated to regard this painting as the essence of the
romantic approach to art.
Unlike other great artists featured in this forum, Caspar David
Friedrich did not produce many works. However, this time my
intention has been to portrait an artistic (and beyond that, an
intellectual) movement rather than feature any given artist. To
widen this view of the movement as regards, specifically, art,
please take into account that this movement included in his
ranks great, better known artists such as William Turner and John
Constable in
England, Francisco de Goya in Spain, Théodore Géricault and
Eugéne Delacroix in France, and many more, most of whom did
produce a vast number of master pieces. However, this does not
mean that a number of other master works by Caspar David
Friedrich will not appear in the course of this thread.
Thank you,
Luis Miguel Goitizolo
GREAT MASTERS OF
PAINTING
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Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (1)
By Caspar David Drietrich
(born Sept. 5, 1774, Greifswald,
Pomerania [Germany]
died May 7, 1840, Dresden)
Technical data (2)
Wanderer above the Sea of Fog
Oil on canvas
1818
74.8 x 94
cm
(29.45" x 3' 1.01")
Kunsthalle (Hamburg, Germany)
Added: 2001-10-14 00:00:00
Profile (3)
Caspar David Friedrich, (born
Sept. 5, 1774, Greifswald,
Pomerania [Germany]—died
May 7, 1840, Dresden, Saxony),
pioneer early 19th-century German Romantic painter. His vast, mysterious
landscapes and seascapes proclaimed man’s helplessness against the
forces of nature and did much to establish the idea of the sublime as
central concerns of the Romantic
movement.
Friedrich studied from 1794 to 1798 at the academy at Copenhagen but
was largely self-taught. Settling at Dresden,
he became a member of an artistic and literary circle that included the
painter Philipp Otto Runge and the writers Ludwig
Tieck and
Novalis. His drawings in sepia, executed in his neat early style, won
the poet J.W. von Goethe’s approval and a prize from the Weimar Art
Society in 1805. His first important oil
painting,
“The Cross
in the Mountains” (c. 1807),
established his mature style, characterized by an overwhelming sense of
isolation, and was an attempt to replace the traditional symbology of
religious painting with one drawn from nature. Other symbolic
landscapes, such as “Shipwreck in the Ice” (1822), reveal his fatalism
and obsession with death. Though based on close observation of nature,
his works were coloured by his imaginative response to the atmosphere of
the Baltic coast and the Harz
Mountains, which he found both awesome and ominous. In 1824
he was made professor of the Dresden academy.
For a long time his work was forgotten; but it was revived when the 20th
century recognized its own existential isolation in his work.
* * *
Caspar David Friedrich was an outstanding 19th-century German romantic
painter whose awesome landscapes and seascapes are not only meticulous
observations of nature but are also allegories.
Friedrich was born on September 5, 1774,
in Greifswald and
studied at theCopenhagen Academy.
In 1798 he settled in Dresden,
where he became a member of an artistic and literary circle imbued with
the ideals of the romantic movement. His early drawings—precisely
outlined in pencil or sepia—explored motifs recurrent throughout his
work: rocky beaches, flat, barren plains, infinite mountain ranges, and
trees reaching toward the sky. Later, his work began to reflect more of
his emotional response to natural scenery.
He began to paint in oils in 1807; one of his first canvases, The Cross
in the Mountains (1807?, Staatliche Kunstsamm-lungen, Dresden),
is representative of his mature style. A bold break from traditional
religious painting, this work is almost pure landscape; the figure of
the crucified Christ, seen from behind and silhouetted against a
mountain sunset, is almost lost in the natural setting. According to
Friedrich's own writings, all the elements in the composition have
symbolic meanings. The mountains are allegories of faith; the rays of
the setting sun symbolize the end of the pre-Christian world; and the
fir trees stand for hope. Friedrich's cold, acid colors, clear lighting,
and sharp contours heighten the feeling of melancholy, isolation, and
human powerlessness against the ominous forces of nature expressed in
his paintings. As a faculty member of the Dresden Academy,
Friedrich influenced later German romantic painters. Although his
reputation declined after his death, 20th-century viewers are fascinated
by his imagery.
(1) This image is a courtesy of the Art
Renewal Center.
(2) Art
Renewal Center.
(3) Encyclopedia
Britannica, GFA.