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A presentation by Craig Holdrege, Director and Senior Researcher at The Nature Institute, on the life and work of Franz Marc, the great expressionist painter...
- 62 min
- 12.2K
- The Nature Institute
Jan 16, 2017 · How to draw an animal using cubism.
- 3 min
- 7.6K
- Amber Heigl
- Pantheism
- Expression Through Color and Form
- How Does A Deer See The World?
- Color and Energy
- Toward Abstraction
Pantheism (literally “all-God-ism”) is the belief that God is not separate from the universe that he created, but identical with it, immanent within it like “shivering and coagulating blood in nature, in animals, in the air.” Probably the most famous statement of the pantheist creed is that of the English Romantic poet William Wordsworth. In his 17...
Marc’s animalization of art did not simply entail naturalistic paintings of animals in unspoiled landscapes. Already in The World Cow and Grazing Horses IV, we can see Marc intensifying the color and simplifying the drawing of his subjects, a tactic he takes even further in Large Blue Horses. In all of these works, Marc uses primary and secondary c...
The fracturing and fragmentation in Delaunay’s works are reflective of human perceptual tendencies: the way present sense-experiences awaken simultaneous echoes of past viewings in the mind. Marc expressly wished to avoid making paintings about human perception. Why reject painting corrupt human beings, and then execute works that reflect a specifi...
Another way to look at Marc’s project is not in terms of objects or the perception of them, but rather in terms of energy and forces. Marc’s description of pantheism as an “organic rhythm,” as “the shivering and coagulating of blood in nature” suggests that the animals and landscape elements themselves are just temporary “coagulations” of matter an...
In the same letter where he talks about how he turned to animals as a more pure subject than humankind, Marc continues, “But then I discovered in [animals], too, so much that was ugly and unfeeling … Trees, flowers, the earth all showed me every year more and more of their deformity and repulsiveness — until now, suddenly, I have become fully consc...
Jul 10, 2022 · Franz Marc was a German Expressionist painter. Born in Munich, he initially studied theology and philosophy before attending the Academy of Fine Arts in the ...
- 5 min
- 1622
- Claritas
Jun 18, 2024 · Context and Background. Franz Marc, a prominent figure in German Expressionism, created Fate of the Animals in 1913. This striking oil on canvas painting, currently housed in the Kunstmuseum in Basel, veers drastically from Marc’s usual portrayal of animals in serene settings.
- ( Head of Content, Editor, Art Writer )
- 1913
- Franz Marc (1880-1916)
- Animal painting
The artist’s vibrant animal paintings were based on careful study, including hours spent observing big cats at the Berlin Zoo.
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Fate of the Animals. The Fate of the Animals is a vision of annihilation as seen through the eyes of the animals. The sharp angles and jagged shapes of the composition convey Marc's more jaded view of the relationship between man and nature. The image serves as a premonition of the horrors of war.