Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Oct 20, 2024 · Barlach achieved great fame in the 1920s and early 1930s, when he executed, among other works, the celebrated war memorials in Magdeburg and Hamburg and the religious figures for the Church of St. Katherine in Lübeck (all in Germany).

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  2. Barlach's fame increased after the war, and he received many awards and became a member in the prestigious Preußische Akademie der Künste (Prussian Art Academy) in 1919 and the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München (Munich Art Academy) in 1925. Barlach rejected a number of honorary degrees and teaching positions.

  3. Ernst Heinrich Barlach (2 January 1870 – 24 October 1938) was a German expressionist sculptor, medallist, printmaker and writer. Although he was a supporter of the war in the years leading to World War I, his participation in the conflict made him change his position, and he is mostly known for his sculptures protesting against the war.

  4. The sculptor, graphic artist and writer Ernst Barlach is one of the most famous artists of German Expressionism. The rapid progress and political changes of the 19th and early 20th centuries spelled a breathless adaptation to ever-changing living conditions.

  5. Aug 8, 2020 · Now considered one of the most important German sculptors, Ernst Barlach spent the last years of his life in artistic isolation and died in Rostock in 1938.

  6. Ernst Heinrich Barlach (2 January 1870 – 24 October 1938) was a German expressionist sculptor, medallist, printmaker and writer. Although he was a supporter of the war in the years leading to World War I, his participation in the conflict made him change his position, and he is mostly known for his sculptures protesting against the war.

  7. People also ask

  8. Like his colleagues Kirchner and Beckmann, Barlach initially welcomed the war as a tool for social change. However, he soon discovered the war’s inhumanity and cruelty, and after the end of the war he produced bronze and wood monuments seen in churches in Germany to remind of and warn against war.

  1. People also search for