Carl Lohse (1895-1965) worked in the domain of
expressionism, and created some masterpiece works between
1919 and 1921.
His works left their marks in the context of the artistic
upheaval, which rose to popularity after the horrors of World War One. His
personal history took its course through his paintings. He was dismissed by
chance from captivity and even military service and was the only survivor of
his fallen down company. His monumental paintings spoke of that experience. He
painted expressive and larger than life heads and the daunting color contrasts
complemented the depth of his horrified psyche.
His journey from Hamburg to Bischofswerda near Dresden in
the October of 1919 changed the course of his artistic journey. He met with his
destined creative fury as a result and found financial support to
pursue his art. His creative rage shaped one by one, portraits, landscapes and
cityscapes within only a year and a half, sequentially. His paintings created
within this time span showed the remarkable freedom that the young artist had
found in art creation.
To the academic eye what was near reckless, his color
contrast in his art proved that to be dramatic and deserving. The academically
tame way was not his; his rhythms were way more energetic than that. His vision
radically simplified the faces and the figures of the faces.
His bold drawings
broke the shapes of those larger-than-life portraits that he modeled on
plaster. His experiments with his creations were somewhat ruthless and rash,
which shaped different imagery of expressionism, cubism, and futurism and led
him the way towards absolute abstraction.
No comments:
Post a Comment