Hermann Max Pechstein (1881-1955)
PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE EUROPEAN COLLECTION
Hermann Max Pechstein (1881-1955)

Fischkutter in der Nachmittagssonne

细节
Hermann Max Pechstein (1881-1955)
Fischkutter in der Nachmittagssonne
signed 'HMPechstein' (lower left); signed and inscribed 'XIII Fischkutter in Nachmittagssonne HMPechstein' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
31½ x 39¼ in. (80.1 x 99.8 cm.)
Painted in 1921
来源
Dr Carl Steinbart, Berlin, by whom acquired directly from the artist by circa 1923, and thence by descent to the present owner.

拍品专文

This painting will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of Max Pechstein's oils by Dr Aya Soika, commissioned by the Pechstein Estate.


Fischkutter in der Nachmittagsonne, Kiefern am Haff and Fischermädchen (lots 444-446) were acquired directly from Max Pechstein by Dr Carl Steinbart (1857-1926), a Berlin banker, art collector, personal friend and patron of the artist. Dr Steinbart had one of the most significant collections of German Expressionism of his day, including over eighty works by Max Slevogt, who painted him in a portrait now in the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne (fig. 1), and some of the finest seascapes in Emil Nolde's oeuvre. From around 1912 until his death in 1926, he acquired a large number of works by Pechstein.

The experiments that Max Pechstein had begun in 1909 during his first trip to Nidden on the Baltic coast, and then subsequently during summers spent at Moritzburg with his fellow Brücke artists, find their natural progression in Pechstein's Baltic land- and seascapes of the 1920s. These display the gradual softening of his previously harsh Expressionist palette, which is particularly evident in the absence of black outlines in Fischkutter in der Nachmittagssonne, and reflect the sense of peace and harmony with nature that he rediscovered in the harbour towns, sand dunes and inlets of the Pomeranian coast, after the difficult years of the First World War and the political and social turmoil that followed it.

Although initially involved in artists' activist groups, in the wake of politically motivated violence from both the radical left- and right-wing movements in 1919, Pechstein grew increasingly disillusioned with the possibilities of progressive political and social change; he became absorbed once again in the more private aspects of expressionist painting, which celebrated personal freedom and a powerful connection to nature, and following the separation from his wife Lotte, made the decision to leave Berlin for the Baltic coast in 1920.

Had it not been for the new division of boundaries in post-war Europe, he would certainly have moved permanently to his beloved Nidden, but as Nidden was now allocated to Lithuania, Pechstein was forced to look for a new paradise to paint. In the artist's memoirs, he describes how he conducted his search, travelling by foot along the coast, with his materials in a rucksack, before discovering in the Pomeranian town of Leba, where he settled and found renewed inspiration: 'Im April 1921 machte ich mich allein, nur mit dem nötigsten Material im Rucksack, auf die Suche. Ich hatte der Karte nach in Ostpommern eine ähnliche Nehrung zwischen dem Leba-See und der Ostsee ausfindig gemacht. Zu Fuß streifte ich die Ostseeküste, nach Westen marschierend, ab. Ich entschloß mich zuletzt, in Leba mein Standquartier zu errichten Ich lernte diese Küste nicht nur schätzen, sondern auch lieben...Alles, was ich sah und um mich erlebte, wurde unerbittlich festgehalten und wie die erbeuteten Forellen, Lachse, Hechte und Aale nach Hause getragen'.

Thus the present work probably belongs to the series of colourist landscapes which Pechstein executed in and around Leba in 1921. The Leba pictures are characterised by an extraordinarily hot colour range reminiscent of his celebrated South Sea pictures executed in Palau. From here, as Max Osborn observed, light became a decisive force in his work: 'He wants to capture the pulsating brightness, the interweaving of the blinding light and the wonderful clear air, or the filtering effect that occurs through the humid atmospheric veil. It evokes an Impressionist theme, but the execution is entirely different. There is nothing analysed, nothing dissolved into a maze of details... The whole series of Leba pictures allows us to observe a new development. The colourful expression has kept its layered flatness, but it is richer, and more lively in its structure. A stream of atmospheric and luminous elements floods into the landscape and merges with the local colours' (M. Osborn, Max Pechstein, Berlin, 1922).