THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTOR
ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER (1880-1938)

Ins Meer steigender Mann

Details
ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER (1880-1938)
Ins Meer steigender Mann
lithograph printed in colours, 1913, on smooth wove paper, a very fine and richly inked impression of this extremely rare print, signed in pencil, inscribed 'Handdruck', with margins, minor creasing mainly at the sheet edges, a short vertical tear at the lower centre sheet edge, a few other nicks at the sheet edges, some light-staining, lesser defects, otherwise generally in good condition
L. 23½ x 20in. (60 x 51cm.) S. 28¼ x 23½in. (71.6 x 59.4cm.)
Literature
G. Schiefler, Die Graphik Ernst Ludwig Kirchners, Berlin, 1924-31, no. 190
A. and W.-D. Dube, E. L. Kirchner, Das graphische Werk, Stuttgart, 1967, no. L231

Lot Essay

Kirchner spent the summer of 1913 with Erna Schilling and his young MUIM pupils Werner Gothein (probably the subject of this lithograph) and Hans Gewecke on the island of Fehmarn in the Baltic. For the artist, Fehmarn had the exotic and primitive qualities that other expressionists looked for in the South Seas.

In the works resulting from the two Fehmarn summers of 1912-13 the figures often take on a new monumentality in contrast to the earlier Moritzburg scenes. Both figure and landscape, however, form a tight rhythmic unity within the composition of rapid, bold strokes and flat colour planes.

The artist would have produced this lithograph on his return to Berlin in the Autumn of 1913 and the dynamic qualities of line and striking impact of the colours lend an otherwise idyllic scene all the intensity of the Berlin street-scenes which Kirchner was embarking on at this time.

More from German & Austrian Art '96

View All
View All