Franz Marc:
Pendant "Hommage à Franz Marc" with chain, gold-plated version
Franz Marc:
Pendant "Hommage à Franz Marc" with chain, gold-plated version

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gold-plated 925 sterling silver | size 6 x 2.7 cm | chain 60 cm

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Product no. IN-240157

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Pendant "Hommage à Franz Marc" with chain, gold-plated version
Franz Marc: Pendant "Hommage à Franz Marc" with chain, go...

Detailed description

Pendant "Hommage à Franz Marc" with chain, gold-plated version

Franz Marc understood art as a symbolic language whose roots could be traced back "to the mysterious in nature". For example, the horse is a symbol of strength and vitality. Pendant after Marc's famous picture "Blue Horse", 1911. Collier chain 60 cm. Size 6 x 2.7 cm. Gold-plated 925 sterling silver.

Portrait of the artist Franz Marc

About Franz Marc

1880-1916

Franz Marc's unique talent was recognised and encouraged at the Munich Academy. On several trips to Paris, he discovered the works of van Gogh for the first time, which made a significant impression on him and helped him to develop an independent artistic language. Through his friend August Macke, he met Wassily Kandinsky, Gabriele Münter and Alfred Kubin, with whom he founded the Expressionist artists' association "Der Blaue Reiter" in 1911. At the outbreak of World War I, Marc was drafted into military service and died two years later in the Battle of Verdun.

Marc examined Naturalism, Art Nouveau and French Impressionism, but sought a new language of expression in order to be able to depict "the spiritual essence of things". With unprecedented consistency, he approached a new form of art in which colours acquired a symbolic meaning far beyond naturalistic representation: "Every colour must clearly say who and what it is, and must be set on clear shapes", Marc explained. For him, blue is the colour of the spiritual, red is love, passion and vulnerability, yellow is the sun and femininity.

Animal, in particular, were the focus of his painting, as they, in contrast to people, symbolised originality and purity to him. Just like Kandinsky, he sought the renewal of the spiritual in art.

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