Picture "Spring Day" (1897/98), golden framed version
Picture "Spring Day" (1897/98), golden framed version
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ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 499 copies | numbered certificate | reproduction on canvas | on stretcher frame | framed | size 60 x 96 cm (h/w)
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Picture "Spring Day" (1897/98), golden framed version
"Hans am Ende paints music" is how Rilke described his friend's painting. "The colours of his landscapes come in as if they had been waiting for the wave of an invisible baton... A whole orchestra gathers in the space of the frame."
Original: 1897/98, oil on canvas, 70 x 120 cm, Kunsthalle Bremen.
Edition on artist's canvas with linen structure, on a wooden stretcher frame. Limited edition of 499 copies with a numbered certificate on the back. Framed in a golden solid wood frame. Size 60 x 96 (h/w). ars mundi Exclusive Edition.
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Customised picture frame
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Customised picture frame
About Hans am Ende
In 1889 Hans am Ende co-founded the artists’ colony in Worpswede together with Fritz Mackensen, Otto Modersohn, Fritz Overbeck, Heinrich Vogeler and Carl Vinnen. Their participation in the Munich Artists' Cooperative Exhibition of 1895 resulted in honours and purchases for the small group and thus their artistic breakthrough.
Hans am Ende, born in Trier on 31 December 1864, became a student at the Munich Academy from 1884-89, with an interruption of two years. His personal acquaintance with Fritz Mackensen, who had discovered the unknown farming village in the Teufelsmoor north of Bremen by chance, prompted Ende to settle in Worpswede for good in 1889.
Hans am Ende's strongly coloured paintings mainly focus on the moorland. Here he was far away from the academic art establishment and found an immediately captivating experience of nature. He captured the rugged landscape in atmospheric, delicate nature paintings.
In his later work, the Swiss high mountains became the focus of his motifs. He spent the last years of his life there and died in 1918.
Graphic or sculpture edition that was initiated by ars mundi and is available only at ars mundi or at distribution partners licensed by ars mundi.
The style of Impressionism, which emerged in French painting around 1870, owes its name to Claude Monet's landscape 'Impression, Soleil Levant'. After initial rejection, it began a veritable triumphal procession.
Painters such as Claude Monet, Edgar Degas, Edouard Manet, Auguste Renoir and others created motifs from everyday life, urban and landscape scenes in bright, natural light.
Impressionism can be seen as a reaction to academic painting. The emphasis was not on content with its strict rules of painting structure, but on the object as it appears at any given moment, in an often random cut out. The reality was seen in all its variety of colours in natural lighting. The Studio painting was replaced by open-air painting.
Through the brightening of the palette and the dissolution of firm contours, a new approach to colour emerged. In many cases, the colours were no longer mixed on the palette but side by side on the canvas so that the final impression lies in the eye of the viewer with a certain distance. In "Pointillism", (with painters such as Georges Seurat or Paul Signac) this principle was taken to the extreme.
Outside France, Impressionism was taken up by painters such as Max Slevogt, Max Liebermann and Lovis Corinth in Germany, and by James A. M. Whistler in the United States.
However, Impressionism was only expressed to a limited extent in the art of sculpture. In the works of Auguste Rodin, who is considered one of the main representatives, a dissolution of surfaces is evident, in which the play of light and shadow is included in the artistic expression. Degas and Renoir created sculptures as well.