View allAll Photos Tagged expressionism

Artyom Yarovenko - “Landscape 26/11 №3”, 2013

Oil on canvas, 40x60 cm

charcoal

acrylic

medium

120lb heavy weight drawing paper

12x6" Abstract expressionist painting on paper

Acrylic on 60cm by 80cm canvas

By Pedro Villanueva. Punta Arenas. Chile

Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) ~ Toronto Canada

"Abstract Expressionism New York"

Travelling show curated (& owned) by Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) ~ New York City USA

 

Ch.19 The New York School

April 18, 2012

OTTAWA

This is an homage to the Lubalin designed layouts of remarkable vitality in EROS.

Lois diCosola Vineyard, oil on canvas, 52" x 48", 1963

My cousin, Shane, is 5 this year and he likes to draw.

Dean Roberts © 2010

ERICH HECKEL or German Expressionism

 

A magnificent exhibition in Ghent (Belgium)

 

At the end of 2024, the Museum of Fine Arts Ghent (MSK) dedicated an exhibition to the German artist Erich Heckel (1883-1970). Heckel was one of the leading figures of German Expressionism and a co-founder of the artists' association Brücke.

 

From the end of the 19th century, young artists in Germany resisted the fleeting nature of Impressionism. In Dresden, the Brücke artists' association was founded in 1905. The 22-year-old Erich Heckel was one of the co-founders. This association of self-taught artists aimed to express strong joie de vivre in a common style of bright colors and angular forms. This style is called Expressionism: the artist tries to convey inner emotions through form and color rather than objective reality.

 

At the outbreak of World War I, Heckel was in his early thirties. Nevertheless, he already enjoyed a solid reputation in Germany. During the war, he became acquainted with Flanders. As a nurse for the Red Cross, he traveled to Ghent, Roeselare, and Ostend. On the hospital train, assembled by Walter Kaesbach, a curator of the Berlin National Gallery, were other painters and writers. As a result, the emergency hospital at Ostend station grew into a true artists' colony. Heckel met James Ensor there and developed a special friendship with his fellow nurse, the young poet Ernst Morwitz, whose literary world had a significant influence on his visual work.

 

During the war, Heckel's artistic activities continued. Between their shifting duties, the members of the artists' colony had enough time to devote to their art. In addition to several paintings, many gouaches, watercolors, drawings, and graphic works have been preserved: views of Roeselare, Ostend, and Ghent, sometimes featuring picturesque figures and bathers, but also still lifes, landscapes, and seascapes.

 

Despite the historical context, Heckel's stay in Flanders extended beyond World War I. Heckel was not a 'war artist' but a nurse working mainly behind the front lines. As a draftsman, he made numerous sketches of the places he visited and the people he observed. As a painter, he was particularly impressed by the Flemish landscape and the North Sea, with their unique cloud formations where light always tries to break through; motifs that seemed both foreign and familiar to him. The Flemish landscapes reminded him of the early days of the Brücke, when Heckel and his friends Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff would go out to paint en plein air.

 

(Source : MSK GHENT – BELGIUM)

 

Regional Gallery, Prešov, Slovakia

 

from the collection and temporary exhibitions

Mouse 2008 from the Wake Forest exhibit. ian sands - pop expressionism

Lauren, first prize winner of the crazy face awards 3 years running. Thanks again for another winning performance.

marker and pastel on paper

Done for part 9 "expressionism" of the OCA Painting 1 course. A bit blue and murky indoors. Slightly smaller tha A2, water-mixable oils on primed paper.

© ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © All material in my gallery MAY NOT be reproduced, copied, edited, published, transmitted or uploaded in any way without my permission.

Mixed Media painted to create something out of nothing after listening to John Cage's 4'33

ERICH HECKEL or German Expressionism

 

A magnificent exhibition in Ghent (Belgium)

 

At the end of 2024, the Museum of Fine Arts Ghent (MSK) dedicated an exhibition to the German artist Erich Heckel (1883-1970). Heckel was one of the leading figures of German Expressionism and a co-founder of the artists' association Brücke.

 

From the end of the 19th century, young artists in Germany resisted the fleeting nature of Impressionism. In Dresden, the Brücke artists' association was founded in 1905. The 22-year-old Erich Heckel was one of the co-founders. This association of self-taught artists aimed to express strong joie de vivre in a common style of bright colors and angular forms. This style is called Expressionism: the artist tries to convey inner emotions through form and color rather than objective reality.

 

At the outbreak of World War I, Heckel was in his early thirties. Nevertheless, he already enjoyed a solid reputation in Germany. During the war, he became acquainted with Flanders. As a nurse for the Red Cross, he traveled to Ghent, Roeselare, and Ostend. On the hospital train, assembled by Walter Kaesbach, a curator of the Berlin National Gallery, were other painters and writers. As a result, the emergency hospital at Ostend station grew into a true artists' colony. Heckel met James Ensor there and developed a special friendship with his fellow nurse, the young poet Ernst Morwitz, whose literary world had a significant influence on his visual work.

 

During the war, Heckel's artistic activities continued. Between their shifting duties, the members of the artists' colony had enough time to devote to their art. In addition to several paintings, many gouaches, watercolors, drawings, and graphic works have been preserved: views of Roeselare, Ostend, and Ghent, sometimes featuring picturesque figures and bathers, but also still lifes, landscapes, and seascapes.

 

Despite the historical context, Heckel's stay in Flanders extended beyond World War I. Heckel was not a 'war artist' but a nurse working mainly behind the front lines. As a draftsman, he made numerous sketches of the places he visited and the people he observed. As a painter, he was particularly impressed by the Flemish landscape and the North Sea, with their unique cloud formations where light always tries to break through; motifs that seemed both foreign and familiar to him. The Flemish landscapes reminded him of the early days of the Brücke, when Heckel and his friends Ernst Ludwig Kirchner and Karl Schmidt-Rottluff would go out to paint en plein air.

 

(Source : MSK GHENT – BELGIUM)

 

To complete the Art History project I did last year, we had to choose an art movement and base a photographic project on it. I chose Abstract Expressionism, as I loved the bright colours and the narrative of emotions you could get from the movement in the paintings.

I started this project with light movement, not thinking about the movements of each light source as I photographed them. In editing, I coloured each of the light trails differently, and then composited all the images together to created a colourful, eye catching photograph full of movement.

Acrylic and Oil on canvas

102cm x 102cm

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