The Getty Research Institute announced the acquisition of 82 prints by German artist Max Liebermann (1847–1935). The collection of prints spans a large part of the artist’s career and highlights the celebrated painter’s skill as a printmaker. The prints are a promised gift of an anonymous donor in memory of Siegbert and Toni Marzynski, the original collectors.
Max Liebermann (1847-1935), The Weaver, 1883. Etching. The Getty Research Institute
“This set of pristine, well-documented prints by one of the most prolific and popular figures in modern German art is incredibly important for researchers and a beautiful addition to the Getty Research Institute’s special collections,” said Thomas W. Gaehtgens, director of the Getty Research Institute (GRI).
The collection of prints spans more than three decades of Liebermann’s career, from 1887 to 1922. Early works in the collection include idyllic country landscapes such as Grazing Goats, 1887, as well as interiors featuring ordinary people, such as The Midday Meal, 1888, or The Weaver, 1883, with a particular emphasis on the theme of work. The majority of the collection comprises views of the seaside, city streets, the opera, and other genre subjects. With the virtuosity of an old master painter-printmaker, Liebermann excelled at creating the effect of atmosphere in the various print media in which he worked. Many of the prints either inspired or were inspired by particular paintings of this period. Prints made during the First World War and under the Weimar Republic include particularly exquisite portraits of prominent men such as the Imperial Chancellor (1915) and composer Richard Strauss (1919).
“Liebermann’s prints are an essential counterpoint to painting within his career, which this collection of prints demonstrates particularly well,” said Louis Marchenso, curator of prints and drawings at the GRI. “Most of the prints are in pristine condition, display a rich range of tonal values and allow us to gauge the evolution of his technique.”
The painter, draughtsman and printmaker Max Liebermann (1947-1935) was one of the most prolific and well-known figures in modern German art. Over the course of his career Liebermann worked in a wide range of styles. His first major period of painting garners frequent comparison to the realism of Jean-François Millet and the Dutch School: figures bend and kneel in dusk-tinged landscapes, working in fields rendered with soft yet sturdy brushstrokes, or gather in somber interiors. These paintings were highly controversial at the time, rejected by critics for a perceived lack of idealization. Liebermann, however, saw these paintings as bestowing dignity on marginalized classes of society. As the 19th century ebbed, Liebermann’s paintings became less focused on weighty subject matter and showed a greater interest in atmosphere and the art of painting itself. These paintings functioned as studies on the effect of light as it filtered through leisure scenes indebted to the airy subjects of the Impressionists, of whose work Liebermann assembled an impressive collection. It was at this point that Liebermann found overwhelming critical and popular success. His work, however, maintained distinctive stylistic links to his earlier naturalism, never approaching the abstraction of some of the Impressionists or his German contemporaries.
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