German Expressionism: The Graphic Impulse focuses on the explosive production of graphic art-prints, drawings, posters, illustrated books, and periodicals-associated with Expressionism, the broad ...
German Expressionist films are not exactly popular fodder for the contemporary remake machine. Most are silent and at least a century old, and almost all of them are the product of artists tapped into ...
German Expressionism was a messy, complicated movement, with numerous stylistic and philosophical variations. It’s not easily corralled into a tidy overview, despite the best efforts of the Neue ...
This exhibition explores the influence of western medieval forms, practices, and themes on German Expressionists and their opposition to the tradition of naturalism. Presenting a new perspective from ...
The works that best exemplify a uniquely German grotesque in Reexamining the Grotesque are those that reflect the war and Weimar years. With Franz Marc and August Macke: 1909-1914, the Neue Galerie ...
The German expressionist collection of the New Walk Museum & Art Gallery in Leicester, England, has been redisplayed in a new space, The Art Newspaper reports. The city’s mayor is due to preside over ...
The German fantasist Paul Scheerbart’s greatest novel, Lesabéndio, was first published in 1913, the year that Expressionism began to flower in Berlin. The novel, both deriving from and contributing to ...
George Grosz, “Attack (Attentat),” 1915, lithograph in black on laid paper. (National Gallery of Art/Purchased as the gift of Richard A. Simms and Ailsa Mellon Bruce Fund/Estate of George ...
The German Expressionist film was born on Feb. 27, 1920, when “The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari” received its first public screening at the Marmorhaus, a Berlin theater. The German actor Werner Krauss ...