Lot Essay
Painted in the year of the first Neue Sachlichkeit exhibition in Mannheim, in which Beckmann's work was included, Kleine Landschaft, Viareggio is a strange and eerie landscape that displays many of the features common to this much-debated post-Expressionist tendency in German art.
Kleine Landschaft, Viareggio depicts a scene from the coastal Tuscan town of Viareggio where, in the summer of 1925, Beckmann and his new wife Mathilde ('Quappi') had gone for part of their honeymoon. The work is one of two paintings of the beach in the Italian town that Beckmann made on his return to Frankfurt. Devoid of all figures and even eerily omitting the inclusion of telegraph wires between the poles, the empty coastal scene that Beckmann presents in this deceptively simple work with its vibrant and strange trio of sailing ships set at its centre is one that deliberately invokes a profound sense of mystery.
This metaphysical sense of there being an enigma or mystery at the heart of reality and existence is one that Beckmann constantly sought to evoke in his work. It is this, and perhaps only this that relates his work the Neue Sachlichkeit tendency-a tendency that was to a large extent rooted in the strange classicism of the pittura metafisica painters Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà. 'My aim' Beckmann once said, 'is always to get hold of the magic of reality and to transfer this reality into painting - to make the invisible visible through reality. It may sound paradoxical, but it is, in fact reality which forms the mystery of our existence', adding that he was 'seeking for the bridge which leads from the visible to the invisible, like the famous cabbalist who once said: "If you wish to get hold of the invisible, you must penetrate as deeply as possible into the visible." To penetrate is to go through' (Beckmann quoted in 'On My Painting', 1938, B.C. Buenger (ed.), Max Beckmann: Self Portrait in Words, 1997, p. 302).
In Kleine Landschaft, Viareggio, Beckmann's use of the deep perspective of a narrow street and its buildings with dark empty windows clearly draws on a similar sense of strangeness and enigma to some of de Chirico's early metaphysical paintings, without resorting to their more poetic fetishisation of the object. Illuminating the horizon-line against the sombre background of a dark grey day and utilising its innate mystery, Beckmann presents in this work a bizarre vista that appears to depict reality but which in fact operates like a religious icon or a mandala - as a window-like image for contemplation.
Kleine Landschaft, Viareggio depicts a scene from the coastal Tuscan town of Viareggio where, in the summer of 1925, Beckmann and his new wife Mathilde ('Quappi') had gone for part of their honeymoon. The work is one of two paintings of the beach in the Italian town that Beckmann made on his return to Frankfurt. Devoid of all figures and even eerily omitting the inclusion of telegraph wires between the poles, the empty coastal scene that Beckmann presents in this deceptively simple work with its vibrant and strange trio of sailing ships set at its centre is one that deliberately invokes a profound sense of mystery.
This metaphysical sense of there being an enigma or mystery at the heart of reality and existence is one that Beckmann constantly sought to evoke in his work. It is this, and perhaps only this that relates his work the Neue Sachlichkeit tendency-a tendency that was to a large extent rooted in the strange classicism of the pittura metafisica painters Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà. 'My aim' Beckmann once said, 'is always to get hold of the magic of reality and to transfer this reality into painting - to make the invisible visible through reality. It may sound paradoxical, but it is, in fact reality which forms the mystery of our existence', adding that he was 'seeking for the bridge which leads from the visible to the invisible, like the famous cabbalist who once said: "If you wish to get hold of the invisible, you must penetrate as deeply as possible into the visible." To penetrate is to go through' (Beckmann quoted in 'On My Painting', 1938, B.C. Buenger (ed.), Max Beckmann: Self Portrait in Words, 1997, p. 302).
In Kleine Landschaft, Viareggio, Beckmann's use of the deep perspective of a narrow street and its buildings with dark empty windows clearly draws on a similar sense of strangeness and enigma to some of de Chirico's early metaphysical paintings, without resorting to their more poetic fetishisation of the object. Illuminating the horizon-line against the sombre background of a dark grey day and utilising its innate mystery, Beckmann presents in this work a bizarre vista that appears to depict reality but which in fact operates like a religious icon or a mandala - as a window-like image for contemplation.