Title: Caspar David Friedrich 17741840
1Caspar David Friedrich 1774-1840
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- The Artist Caspar David Friedrich was born in
1774 in Greifwald. - Friedrich was one of the greatest exponents in
European art of the - Symbolic Landscape.
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2Caspar David Friedrich 1774-1840
- Der Künstler bei der
- Arbeit.
3He studied at the Academy in Copenhagen
(1794-98), and subsequently settled in Dresden,
often traveling to other parts of Germany.
Friedrich's landscapes are based entirely on
those of northern Germany and are beautiful
renderings of trees, hills, harbors, morning
mists, and other light effects based on a close
observation of nature.
4 5a walk at dusk
6Der Watzmann, 1824/25
7DAS RIESENGEBIRGE
8(No Transcript)
9Ein Mann und eine Frau in Betrachtung des Mondes,
1824
10Caspar David Friedrich1774-1840
- He was the first artist to create awe before
nature and to infuse landscape and light with
emotional and symbolic content
11Felsenlandschaft im Elbsangsteingebirge
- Friedrich aimed to produce a Christian art
based in nature, divested of standard biblical
imagery. - "God is everywhere," he said, "in the
smallest grain of sand." - Friedrich's oeuvre encompasses scenes of
ruined Gothic churches, cemeteries, desolate
landscapes, and silent figures in vast spaces,
all deeply spiritual and often melancholy.
12Abbey with Oak Trees (1810) A landscape showing a
ruined abbey in the snow, can be appreciated on
one level as a bleak, winter scene, but the
painter also intended the composition to
represent both the church shaken by the
Reformation and the transitoriness of earthly
things.
13 CROSS IN THE MOUNTAINS
- In 1807 he began working in oils and
immediately caused a sensation his Cross in the
Mountains, installed in a private chapel, used
landscape to evoke the spirit of the Crucifixion.
In 1808 he exhibited one of his most
controversial paintings, The Cross in the
Mountains (Gemaldegalerie, Dresden), in
which--for the first time in Christian art--an
altarpiece was conceived in terms of a pure
landscape. The cross, viewed obliquely from
behind, is an insignificant element in the
composition. More important are the dominant rays
of the evening sun, which the artist said
depicted the setting of the old, pre-Christian
world. The mountain symbolizes an immovable
faith, while the fir trees are an allegory of
hope..Shocked by his use of secular genre for a
religious purpose, critics accused Friedrich of
sacrilege.
14DER WANDERER
Der Wanderer über dem Nebelmeer, um 1818
15Eichbaum im Schnee, 1829
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- Even some of Friedrich's apparently
nonsymbolic paintings contain inner meanings,
clues to which are provided either by the
artist's writings or those of his literary
friends.
16Caspar David Friedrich 1774-1840
- Die Kreidefelsen auf Rügen