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Self portraiture
Self portraiture





And it has become iconic of the Weimar Republic, and therefore of a decisive era in the history of Germany and of the Europe centered on, and unsettled by, Weimar Germany. Īrt historian Joseph Koerner said of the painting: "It’s iconic of the artistic movement called Expressionism. These faces have to disappear again from our world if humanism is to be reconstituted." Heinrich Simon, the publisher of the newspaper Frankfurter Zeitung, wrote in 1930 in his praise: "that this lonely maverick may become the only personality in European painting who, by his example, will form a style for the future." Peter Selz in 1964 named it "one of the great self-portraits in the history of art. Critic Fritz Stahl, writing in 1928, expressed his disgust: "A Caesarean mask, frowning forehead, tyrant's stare, every inch the great man. The initial critical reception to the portrait was mixed. The undiluted contrast of black, white, and brown gives a feeling of clean stylization." Critical reception Everything is quietly clarified, distilled into a rational formula. The man's left hand is moved over to the middle of the picture thus, both well-lighted hands together form a counterpoise against the background, which is dark on the left and light on the right-a delicate balancing act. The closed contour proclaims a self-contained human being. Reliability is shown in the perfect equilibrium the stance is reminiscent of the classical contrapposto of heroic statues. The face is partitioned into symmetrical patches of light and shadow. Stephan Lackner described it in these terms: "Symmetry here becomes a symbol of security.

self portraiture

Despite the use of the white color, the picture looks rather dark. In the left half of the picture viewers can see an empty door frame, and in the lower half of the picture a wooden wall paneling. In this rather casual posture and with a sober look, he stands in front of a dirty white wall. If you are interested in any aspects of self-portraiture, this eBook is for you How do you tell a personal photographic story using yourself as the subject This beautifully presented eBook includes pages of inspiration through images and favourite quotes, editing and behind the scenes videos, and lots of.

self portraiture

He wears a tuxedo typical of the 1920s fashion and holds a cigarette in his left hand at stomach level, while he puts his right hand on his hip. The self-portrait shows Max Beckmann posing in a frontal way. It now hangs in the Busch-Reisinger Museum of the Harvard University Art Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

self portraiture

Self-Portrait in Tuxedo is an oil on canvas painting by Max Beckmann from 1927. Painting by Max Beckmann Self-Portrait in Tuxedoīusch-Reisinger Museum, Harvard University Art Museum, Cambridge







Self portraiture