Encompasses varying stylistic approaches that emphasize intense personal expression. Renouncing the stiff bourgeois social values that prevailed at the turn of the 20th century, and rejecting the traditions of the state-sponsored art academies, Expressionist artists turned to boldly simplified or distorted forms and exaggerated, sometimes clashing colors. As Expressionism evolved from the beginning of the 20th century through the early 1920s, its crucial themes and genres reflected deeply humanistic concerns and an ambivalent attitude toward modernity, eventually confronting the devastating experience of World War I and its aftermath.
Works
8 works online
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Edvard Munch Melancholy III (Melankoli III) 1902
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Vasily Kandinsky Panel for Edwin R. Campbell No. 4 1914
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George Grosz Metropolis (Grossstadt) 1917
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Karl Schmidt-Rottluff The Miraculous Draught of Fishes (Petri Fischzug) from the portfolio 9 Woodcuts by Schmidt-Rottluff (9 Holzschnitte von Schmidt-Rottluff) 1918
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Otto Arpke, Erich Ludwig Stahl Poster for The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (Das Cabinet des Dr. Caligari) 1919
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Ernst Ludwig Kirchner Street, Dresden 1908 (reworked 1919; dated on painting 1907)
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Max Pechstein Dancer in the Mirror ( Tänzerin im Spiegel ) 1923
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Käthe Kollwitz Self-Portrait, Hand at the Forehead (Selbstbildnis mit der Hand an der Stirn) 1910, published c. 1946/1948
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