Lesser Ury (1861-1931)
PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF ALICE KING, LONDON
Lesser Ury (1861-1931)

Berliner Strassenszene

Details
Lesser Ury (1861-1931)
Berliner Strassenszene
signed 'L. Ury' (lower left); with the Nachlass stamp numbered '750' (on a label attached to the reverse)
oil on canvas
12¾ x 9 5/8in. (32.4 x 24.4cm.)
Provenance
Dr L.G.T. King, Berlin, acquired directly from the artist, and thence by descent to the present owner.

Lot Essay

The greater part of Lesser Ury's life was spent in Berlin. The artist's oeuvre is centered around life in the German capital and stylistically he is considered one of Germany's outstanding Impressionists. His favourite subjects were intimate café scenes, carriages and later taxis plying the rain swept streets. Overcast, dramatic skies, sunlight playing off wet leaves and elegant women on the capital's boulevards feature prominently in his work. His intense poetic nature found expression in the shimmering effects of rain and reflected light in the metropolitan cityscape. He was a master of interpreting the changing moods and temperament of this great city.
"Above all, he remains a subtle colourist. Martin Buber wrote of his work: 'He belonged among those Promethean natures that always seek a new language, capable of expressing everything ... He found this language in his use of colour. Form expresses none of the ambigious relationships between things, their effects on each other ... A thing does not exist in itself, but everything exists in everything. Form divides, but colour unites.' "(E. M. Namenyi, "Jewish Impressionists" in Jewish Art, C. Roth (ed.), Jerusalem, 1971, p. 220).

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