Expressionism, an
international movement in the visual arts as well as in literature,
film, and theater, flourished in Germany between 1905 and
1925. The artists championed
idealist values and sought to break free from the traditional
restrictions of bourgeois society. They were principally concerned
with expressing emotion and inner psychological truth.
The founding members of the pioneering German Expressionist
group Die Brücke
(The Bridge)—Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff,
and Fritz Bleyl—created images of anxiety and the social alienation experienced
in the growing metropolis prior to the outbreak of World War I. Their paintings,
sculptures, and prints showed the influence of “primitive” art, with
its simplified forms, deliberately crude figuration, and powerful, often jarring
juxtapositions of color. The members of the more stylistically diverse group
Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider), which was founded in 1911 by Vasily Kandinsky,
Franz Marc, and Gabriele Münter, developed nonrepresentational images
related to spiritual concepts.
For many Expressionist artists, World War I was a cataclysmic
event that transformed their art. While the war brought disillusionment,
further alienation, and death to many, it proved to be a core
subject for the Expressionists. The subsequent revolution of
1918 provided an opportunity for the artists to join together
in an idealistic effort to radically reshape modern society.
The museum has a particularly rich collection of German Expressionist
art—paintings,
sculptures, prints, drawings, and illustrated books. The collection was built
through purchases and gifts beginning in 1946, when German-born William Valentiner
became codirector of the Los Angeles County Museum of History, Science, and Art
(the precursor of LACMA). In the 1980s, LACMA established the Robert Gore Rifkind
Center for German Expressionist Studies. This comprehensive collection includes
approximately seven thousand works on paper and a library of more than four thousand
volumes, many containing original graphics, which were key to the accomplishments
of the Expressionists. These holdings include not only superior impressions of
woodcuts and lithographs by Kirchner, Heckel, Emil Nolde, and Kandinsky, but
also rare periodicals and portfolios by Otto Dix, Käthe Kollwitz,
and Max Pechstein, as well as numerous examples from lesser-known artists. 
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Highlights from the Robert Gore Rifkind Center
for German Expressionist Studies
Browse the Robert Gore Rifkind Center for German Expressionist Studies Collections online
Erich Heckel Germany, 1883-1970 Standing child, 1910 Woodcut printed in green, red and black on paper Image: 14 3/4 x 10 13/16 in. (37.47 x 27.46 cm) irregular; Sheet: 16 13/16 x 12 11/16 in. (42.70 x 32.23 cm) M.82.288.370b The Robert Gore Rifkind Center for German Expressionist Studies View this full artwork record
Between 1910 and 1920 the mature phase of German expressionism reflected
the enormous social, cultural, and political changes of that decade.
The movement's nucleus, Die Brücke (the Bridge), had four founders:
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff, Fritz Bleyl, and Erich
Heckel. They believed that the empowering role of art could bring
about a revolutionary encounter with man's materialism and spirituality
in a totally new society. Architecture students and self-taught artists,
they were greatly influenced by Paul Gauguin, Edvard Munch, Vincent
van Gogh, and Oceanic and African tribal arts.
The German expressionists
conducted prolific experiments in the graphic arts, introducing new
techniques, vibrant colors, and disturbing, sometimes controversial
subject matter in their prints. Woodcuts provided a way to confirm
effects later appearing in their canvases: compositional structure,
dramatic contrasts of light and color, the flat picture plane.
Erich
Heckel first made woodcuts in 1904. While in Dresden the four Brücke
artists used an adolescent girl named Fränzi as
a model. The subject of this print, she was regarded as the ideal
child of the new society, at once innocent and wise. Although there
are traditional elements in this composition—the standing figure,
the landscape beyond the window—there is nothing complacent
about it. In contrast to her unformed, almost sexless body, the child's
strong, crudely drawn face conveys in a minimum of detail an expression
implying knowledge beyond her years. 
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