1. The Wallraf-Richartz-Museum shows Landscapes by Liebermann, Corinth, & Slevogt

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    artwork: Max Liebermann - "Die Blumenterrasse im Wannseegarten nach Nordwesten", 1924, Oil on canvas, 50 x 75 cm. Schweinfurt, Museum Georg Schäfer

    COLOGNE.- Max Liebermann, Lovis Corinth and Max Slevogt: three names that are representative of German impressionism. Three artists whose creative works captivate a broad public. Three masters who are united by one great passion: landscape painting. It is to this passion that the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum is devoting its very own special exhibition in summer 2010. Under the title “Liebermann, Corinth, Slevogt – The Landscapes” the museum shall be exhibiting around 90 works of these three German impressionists. On view 30 April through 1 August, 2010.

    artwork: Lovis Corinth - "Der Maler Leistikow", 1900 Oil on canvas, 60 x 49 cm., Berlin, Staatliche Museen, Nationalgalerie.Most of the loans will come from internationally renowned institutions such as National Gallery in Berlin, the Städel Museum in Frankfurt and the Belvedere in Vienna. The exhibition will demonstrate how the “triumvirate of German impressionism”, free from commissions and constraints of all kinds, developed its creativity best of all in landscape painting. With great dedication and without falling into routine the artists threw themselves into this, for them untypical, genre. Thus the landscapes are surely also amongst the highlights of their respective œuvres.

    Liebermann, Corinth and Slevogt painted their landscapes whenever good opportunities presented themselves, on their travels or on holiday. Max Slevogt found his motifs in the Palatinate, on Capri and in Egypt. Lovis Corinth was motivated to pick up the brush by his summer resort in Tyrol and later by Lake Walchen. Max Liebermann, finally, preferred at first to paint landscapes in Holland and later in his own garden on the Wannsee in Berlin.

    The exhibition’s focused look at the landscape paintings highlights the individual development of the three painters on their way to becoming great artists. In addition the show will be a representative depiction of significant positions in German landscape painting before and after 1900.

    The exhibition was designed in co-operation with the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, where it can be seen from 12 September – 5 December 2010 afterafter leaving Cologne.

    The Wallraf-Richartz-Museum has one of the world’s leading collections of mediaeval painting, with Stefan Lochner’s “Madonna of the Rose Bower” as its greatest attraction. Other highlights include works by the Baroque masters, ranging from Rubens and Rembrandt to Murillo and Boucher, the German Romantics, French Realism, and Impressionism.

    Embark on a voyage through 700 years of art history. Thanks to the paintings from the Fondation Corboud, the Wallraf-Richartz-Museum has the widest collection of impressionist and neo-impressionist art in Germany. Manet, Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, Morisot, Signac and Seurat are all represented by outstanding works, and van Gogh, Cézanne, Gauguin, Bonnard, Ensor and Munch herald the way to modernism. Visit The Wallraf-Richartz-Museum at : http://www.wallraf.museum/start_e.php


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