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Caspar David Friedrich
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A thought-provoking monograph, hailed by Frank Whitford in the Sunday Times as 'the best book about this fascinating artist that I've ever read'
Caspar David Friedrich, now viewed as the leading German Romantic artist of the nineteenth century, was described by one contemporary as the pioneer of a new genre: the tragedy of landscape. Here, Werner Hofmann, a leading Friedrich scholar, considers Friedrich's principal achievement, the invention of 'landscape as icon', and vividly demonstrates the artist's extraordinary ability to reproduce the natural world in faithful detail, while at the same time imbuing it with spiritual and religious significance. Human figures are also given a decisive role in his work: caught between the near and the distant, the finite and infinite, men and women find a space to engage in the thoughtful contemplation of nature and the divine.
Carefully placing the artist in a wider context, Hofmann examines contemporary judgments and influences on Friedrich's work and his difficult relationship with critics such as Goethe, as well as the way that his religious and political beliefs informed his art, and his unique place within the framework of European Romanticism as a whole. The beautiful illustrations include many of Friedrich's drawings and watercolours as well as over ninety of his works in oils.
Friedrich himself wrote that the greatest gift of an artist was 'to stimulate the spirit, and arouse thoughts, feelings and sensations in the viewer, even if they are not his own.' In so saying, he extended an invitation for others to read multiple meanings into his pictures. Hofmann's ideas cast a remarkable new light on Friedrich's work, yet at the same time leave it open to individual interpretation.
Carefully placing the artist in a wider context, Hofmann examines contemporary judgments and influences on Friedrich's work and his difficult relationship with critics such as Goethe, as well as the way that his religious and political beliefs informed his art, and his unique place within the framework of European Romanticism as a whole. The beautiful illustrations include many of Friedrich's drawings and watercolours as well as over ninety of his works in oils.
Friedrich himself wrote that the greatest gift of an artist was 'to stimulate the spirit, and arouse thoughts, feelings and sensations in the viewer, even if they are not his own.' In so saying, he extended an invitation for others to read multiple meanings into his pictures. Hofmann's ideas cast a remarkable new light on Friedrich's work, yet at the same time leave it open to individual interpretation.
About the Author
Werner Hofmann was born in Vienna. He was Director of the Kunsthalle, Hamburg, from 1969 to 1990 and has also held guest professorships at Berkeley, Columbia and Harvard universities. He has published numerous books on the art of the 19th and 20th centuries.
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