ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER (1880-1938)
ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER (1880-1938)
ERNST LUDWIG KIRCHNER (1880-1938)
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恩斯特·路德維格·基爾希納(1880 - 1938)

《山上的三間紅色小屋》

細節
恩斯特·路德維格·基爾希納(1880 - 1938)
《山上的三間紅色小屋》
簽名:EL Kirchner(背面);遺印及題識:Da/Aa6(背面)
油彩 畫布
23 3/4 x 27 5/8英寸(60.4 x 70.2公分)
1919年作
來源
藝術家舊藏
斯圖加特羅曼·諾伯特·凱特勒(1954年購自上述收藏)
杜塞爾多夫庫爾特·福伯格
杜塞爾多夫威廉·格羅森尼格畫廊
杜塞爾多夫弗朗茲·海因里希·烏爾里希(1958年4月1日購自上述收藏,并由後人繼承);2015年2月5日,倫敦佳士得,拍品編號477
德國私人收藏(購自上述拍賣)
現藏家繼承自上述收藏
出版
D. E. Gordon著《Ernst Ludwig Kirchner》,劍橋,1968年,第353頁,編號599(插圖)
L. Grisebach著《Ernst Ludwig Kirchners Davoser Tagebuch》,維希特拉赫及伯爾尼,1997年,第48頁
展覽
1590年10月至11月 「Ernst Ludwig Kirchner」展覽 聖加侖美術館 編號22(作品名稱《Rote Alphütten zwischen gelben Hügeln》)
(可能)1953年7月至9月 「Gemälde und Graphik aus der Davoser Zeit」展覽 庫爾美術館 編號17(作品名稱《Rote Alphütte vor gelben Hügeln》)
注意事項
Cancellation under the EU Consumer Rights Directive may apply to this lot. Please see here for further information.

榮譽呈獻

Tessa Lord
Tessa Lord Director, Senior Specialist

拍品專文


Painted during the summer of 1919, Drei Hütten am Hügel, Rote Hütten illustrates the profound renewal that occurred in Ernst Ludwig Kirchner’s work following the end of the First World War, as he emerged from a period of intense illness and personal crisis. The artist had suffered a complete mental breakdown shortly after his voluntary enlistment in the German army in 1915, and the following three years were spent in and out of sanatoriums in both Germany and Switzerland as he searched for a respite from his debilitating illness. By the autumn of 1918 he had finally reached a calmer state of mind, and could move to a small Alpine cottage on the Stafelalp above Frauenkirch near Davos, called ‘In den Lärchen.’ The move proved revelatory for Kirchner, not only providing him with a mental clarity that allowed him to emerge from his deep depression and return to his painting once again, but also opening his eyes to an entire spectrum of new subjects. It was here, surrounded by the serenity of the majestic Alpine landscapes, that Kirchner entered one of the most productive periods of his artistic career, painting an array of richly coloured canvases which strove to capture the grandeur of the scenery he discovered in the Swiss Alps, from the awe inspiring vistas and dramatic topography of every peak, to the sheer vitality and fecundity of the local flora.

Describing the appeal of his new home, Kirchner proclaimed: ‘Here, one learns how to see further and go deeper than in so-called “modern” life, which is generally so very much more superficial despite its wealth of outer forms’ (letter to H. Spengler, 3 July 1919, quoted in L. Grisebach, Kirchner, Cologne, 1995, p. 153). In particular, it was the intensity of colours within the landscape which seemed to move Kirchner most. In a letter to Nele van de Velde, whom he had met as a patient in the Bellevue sanatorium in Kreuzlingen, he described the richness of the landscape, the vibrancy of the hues he perceived, and the constantly changing atmosphere of the Swiss Alps: ‘There below you will probably still be having summer, while our sun already gilds the mountains and the larch-trees become yellow. But the colours are wonderful, like old dark red velvet. Down below in the valley the cabins stand out in the boldest Paris blue against the yellow fields. For the first time here one really gets to know the worth of individual colours. And, in the bargain, the stark monumentality of the rows of mountains’ (letter to Nele van de Velde, 13 October 1918, quoted in D. E. Gordon, Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Massachusetts, 1968, p. 107).

As a note in the artist’s diary states, Drei Hütten am Hügel, Rote Hütten was begun on the 28th of August 1919, and takes as its subject a cluster of three brightly coloured alpine huts, nestled amongst the rolling hills and peaks of the Swiss Alps. Looking upwards at the dwellings from the pathway that snakes up the mountainside, Kirchner conjures a sense of unity and togetherness in the close grouping of the huts, perhaps channelling the sense of community and camaraderie he himself had discovered in this idyllic locale. Recording the dramatic play of light and shadow in the mountains that he found so captivating, Kirchner renders the scene in bold swathes of vibrant, saturated colour, using sharp, agitated strokes that zig-zag across the surface of the canvas in a manner that echoes his highly expressive, pre-war style. Along with the bright-hues of the three alpine huts, the entire landscape seems alive with rich colour, from the bold pink swathes of pigment that fill the sky, to the golden hues of the mountainside, and the shades of terracotta and mauve visible in the banks of soil that line the pathway. By allowing his own subjective vision of the alpine scenery to determine the composition, Kirchner captures an impression of the almost spiritual connection to the landscape he had rediscovered in the tranquil setting of the mountains.

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