Pinakothek der Moderne
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Max Beckmann
dal 11/9/2007 al 5/1/2008

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Max Beckmann



 
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11/9/2007

Max Beckmann

Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich

Exile in Amsterdam. The artist expressed the mystery of life in all its ambivalence. His demanding and versatile themes correspond to a broad spectrum of techniques and formats. During his time in Amsterdam Beckmann created not only five triptychs, numerous large-format compositions of figures but also intimate landscape pictures, portraits and nude representations. His ten years in exile in the Netherlands were one of the most creative periods of his life in which he produced around a third of his entire works.


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Exile in Amsterdam

With Max Beckmann – Exile in Amsterdam the Pinakothek der Moderne has initiated an exhibition that will open at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam on 6th April 2007 and then move on to the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich where from 13th September 2007 onwards it will present in extended form more than 100 works. This will be the first showing of almost all the principal works produced by Beckmann during his period of exile in Amsterdam between 1937 and 1947. Patron of the project is Germany’s President Horst Köhler.

Max Beckmann (1884-1950) is among the most important artists of the 20th century. The visionary power, magnificent colouring and mysterious symbolism of his paintings have made Beckmann one of the outstanding figures of Modern Art. His ten years in exile in the Netherlands were one of the most creative periods of his life in which he produced around a third of his entire works

With an intensity comparable only to that of Picasso, Beckmann’s works fascinate and move us through their magical appeal and invite us to enter into an intensive dialogue. Beckmann expressed the mystery of life in all its ambivalence. His demanding and versatile themes correspond to a broad spectrum of techniques and formats. During his time in Amsterdam Beckmann created not only five triptychs, numerous large-format compositions of figures but also intimate landscape pictures, portraits and nude representations. As well as this, he produced graphic prints on the subject of the »Apocalypse«, drawings dedicated to Goethe’s »Faust II«, mysterious watercolours and small drawings on envelopes.

For Munich this exhibition project has a special significance. The Pinakothek der Moderne is second only to St. Louis, USA, in housing the world’s largest collection of the artist’s paintings. It is also home to the Max Beckmann Archives, which makes it the most important research institution on the artist. Furthermore, Munich was the place where the inhumane cultural policies of the National Socialist regime were most forcefully articulated. Immediately after the broadcast of Hitler’s speech marking the opening of the »Haus der deutschen Kunst« on 18th July 1937, which Beckmann heard in Berlin, he decided to leave Germany. On 19th July, at the beginning of the exhibition on »Degenerate Art« in the Arcades of Munich’s Hofgarten, the artist emigrated to Amsterdam. Max Beckmann was never to return to Germany.

Known abroad as the »most German« of all German artists, his horror over the injustices of the NS regime, which was manifested in the flight from his German homeland, assumes special significance. Against this background that underlines the particularly explosive nature of the subject, the exhibition serves not only to provide a better understanding of Max Beckmann’s most creative period; it is also highly relevant from the point of view of cultural politics. Seventy years after the exhibition »Degenerate Art« it signifies renewed debate and review of this dark period of Germany’s history, a period which stands in sharp contrast to the timeless brilliance of his works. Out of »drunken vision« and »disciplined intoxication« have emerged strangely fascinating and magnificently coloured testimonies to the creative energy with which Beckmann reacted to the direct historical and biographical circumstances of the time.

To mark the 70th anniversary of Beckmann’s flight from the National Socialist regime, the Pinakothek der Moderne has succeeded in bringing together for a limited period a major part of the masterpieces he created under adverse conditions in his Amsterdam studio and which were scattered around the globe after the war. The exhibits – among them five of a total nine triptychs – could be won for the exhibition thanks to international loans from leading public and private collections.

The exhibition »Max Beckmann in Amsterdam, 1937-1947« has been organised in collaboration with the van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam. The show will be held in Amsterdam from 6th April to 19th August 2007 and then move from 13th September 2007 to 6th January 2008 to Munich. Accompanying the exhibition at the Pinakothek der Moderne in Munich is the publication Max Beckmann. Exile in Amsterdam.

Press preview 12.09.07, h.11

Pinakothek der Moderne
Barer Strasse 40 - Munich

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