![]() ![]() With this exhibition, the Museum Folkwang carried on the work of Karl Ernst Osthaus, who from 1906 presented and bought works of the Fauve, the Expressionists and Edvard Munch. ![]() Also Edvard Munch who played a central role for the development of Expressionism. ![]() The artist in Germany attentively followed this new painting and took it as a starting point for their own revolutionary developments. The Fauves chose an entirely original artistic path: redefining the relationship between art and nature in their paintings, they allowed the pictorial space to unfold through the powerful interaction of different colours. It confronted, for the first time, the “Fauves”, the so-called “Wild Ones” in French art – Henri Matisse, André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck – with the Norwegian Edvard Munch and the young German and Russian Expressionists Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Erich Heckel, Alexej von Jawlensky, Wassily Kandinsky, Gabriele Münter and Franz Marc. The Museum Folkwang dedicated an exceptional exhibition to one of the most fascinating chapters in early 20th century art in autumn/winter 2012/2013. ![]()
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