





Feuer und Farbe
Gemälde und Grafiken von Walter Jacob
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| Editor(s) | Roland Krischke for the Lindenau-Museum Altenburg |
| Author(s) | Dr. Florian Korn, Marianne Lose, Vincent Rudolf, Karoline Schmidt, Dr. Roman Zieglgänsberger, with a preface by Dr. Roland Krischke, Director of the Altenburg Museums |
| Design | Hug&Eberlein, Leipzig |
| Size | 21 x 28 cm |
| Cover | Softcover |
| Pages | 144 |
| Illustrations | 69 |
| Language(s) | German |
| ISBN | 978-3-96912-199-3 |
Walter Jacob (1893-1964) was a painter whose oeuvre and life reflected the discontinuities of the twentieth century in condensed form. Contemplative natural scenes and the self-portraits were constants to which he hewed throughout his career; in stylistic terms, however, his oeuvre could hardly be more contradictory. Working first in the Impressionist, then in the Expressionist style, he eventually forged a form of expression tending toward abstraction, although he rejected modernist painting throughout his life. The Nazis considered his early work “degenerate,” which led him—a committed National Socialist and active member of the SA—to adapt not just his ideological convictions, but also his aesthetics to the new era: starting in the mid-1930s, he produced naturalistic depictions, sometimes suggestive of the New Objectivity, of “popular” motifs like landscapes, animals, soldiers, and more. Tellingly, though, the backs of some of his canvases are taken up by works that suggest the pleasure he took in experimenting with color and form. The same tension is palpable in the abstract landscapes of his late oeuvre. This catalog gathers works to retrace Jacob’s checkered career, complemented by (art) historical essays that embed his output in its context.
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Dissonance
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Post-reunification Germany has emerged as an important forum for international painting. The generation of artists born in the 1970s and 1980s eschew alignment with collective tendencies and resist clearly definable influences. Meanwhile, their art has registered the cultural and sociological dislocations and divergences since the fall of the Iron Curtain with seismographic precision.
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Anna Leonhardt
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Stephan Kaluza
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schneider+schumacher
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100 Windows
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