1. Groninger Museum opens Major Exhibition of German Expressionism

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    artwork: Emil Nolde - "Verspottung", 1909 - Oil on canvas, 86 x 106 cm.- from the collection of the Brücke Museum in Berlin

    GRONINGEN.- From 13 December 2009 to 11 April 2010, the Groninger Museum will present the highlights from the collection of the Brücke Museum in Berlin. The exhibition, which will be held in the Ploeg Pavilion, will display 150 works, including paintings, drawings, prints and figures by the Brücke members Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt- Rottluff, Fritz Bleyl, Max Pechstein, Emil Nolde, Cuno Amiet and Otto Mueller.

    artwork: Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, "Artistin-Marcella", 1910 Oil on canvas. 101 x 76 cm. © Brücke-Museum BerlinThe basis of the collection and the foundation of the Brücke Museum was the donation of a large number of works by Karl Schmidt- Rottluff. Since then, the collection has been extended with works by the other Brücke members by means of purchases, donations and long-term loans. The artists’ group Brücke, founded in Dresden in 1905, is regarded right down to this day as one of the most important fundaments on which North European expressionism is founded.

    The rapid, sketch-like forms and the expressive colours, in often-contrasting colour combinations, are typical of Brücke expressionism. Their favourite themes included townscapes, landscapes and the world of variety. In 1913 the group disbanded and the artists went their own way. In the thirties, the work of the members of De Brücke was classified by the Nation Socialist regime as being degenerate.

    It is exceptional that these works will be on display in the Groninger Museum. In the 1920s, a number of painters in De Ploeg artists’ group became inspired by the expressionism of De Brücke. An angle on the Groninger landscape, not previously displayed, and the portrait, were created under the inspiring direction of Jan Wiegers who had established contact with Ernst Ludwig Kirchner during a health cure in Davos.

    The new Groninger Museum (1994) is not merely a casing for art, it is a work of art in itself, a principle that is occurring to an increasing extent in contemporary (museum) architecture. It is an artwork in the centre of the city, traversed by public space where passers-by are directly confronted by all kinds of works of art.

    The collections and presentations are the foundation of the Groninger Museum. The Groninger Museum is colourful and extrovert.The Groninger Museum aims at a wide audience. With the presentations, which are of national and international significance, the Groninger Museum hopes to amaze and astound visitors and prompt them towards an opinion. Visit : http://www.groningermuseum.nl/


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