BLECHEN, Karl - b. 1797 Cottbus, d. 1840 Berlin - WGA

BLECHEN, Karl

(b. 1797 Cottbus, d. 1840 Berlin)

German Romantic painter influenced by Friedrich, whom he probably met in Berlin in 1823.

He arrived in Berlin at the age of 16 where he, at the request of his father, completed his commercial studies and then worked for several years in banking. His creative talent became increasingly apparent, prompting him to give up his learned trade and to begin his studies in 1822 at the Art Academy in Berlin. During a visit to Dresden in 1823 he became acquainted with the works of Johan Christian Dahl and Caspar David Friedrich, which deeply impresses him. In Berlin Karl Friedrich Schinkel recognized Blechen’s exceptional talent as a painter and obtained for him a position as stage painter to the royal theater - a task he was well suited to, owing to a strong predisposition for the mysterious, enigmatic and fantastic.

He traveled throughout Italy in 1828-29. With the impressions he gathered from the towns and various landscapes he began painting in a style distinguished by its relaxed, flowing painterly execution. The liberal brushstroke that Blechen used allowed for an amalgamation of individual pictorial elements: landscape, architecture and staffage merge into a symbiotic whole.

On his return he became Professor of landscape painting at the Berlin Academy (1831). He visited Paris in 1835. His later works are more realist and show him moving away from his early Romanticism. Most of his pictures are in Berlin, but there are others in Hanover, Karlsruhe and Vienna.

Owing to progressive bouts of depression, Blechen was soon unable to work and was placed in a psychiatric hospital, where he died in mental derangement. His work was enthusiastically received by his contemporaries, but was also, owing to its disregard for classical landscape painting ideals, cause for controversy.

Alpine Pass in Winter with Monks
Alpine Pass in Winter with Monks by

Alpine Pass in Winter with Monks

This picture is an impression of the wild region of the Bode Valley in the Harz mountains. The pencil sketch was drawn from nature and later worked up into a more complex picture.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 43 minutes):

Schubert: Songs, transcripted for piano by Franz Liszt

Bathers in Terni Park
Bathers in Terni Park by

Bathers in Terni Park

Building the Devil's Bridge
Building the Devil's Bridge by

Building the Devil's Bridge

At first sight the picture seems full of mystery, indeed it creates a sense of unease. The very title seems designed to evoke a shudder, and this impression is strengthened by the darkening evening with its long shadows, and above all, the building crane, which looks like a gallows. The viewer may well be attracted to the Romantic mood of the painting, but the true message is clear, and it is rather sombre. Man is bringing even the most distant and seemingly inaccessible regions under control through civilization and technical advance, and he is mastering the aspects of nature that have till now seemed unapproachable and fearful. But there is also allegory here - it is in the reference to transience. The new bridge that is being built will one day be as crumbling as the old one is now.

Suggested listening (streaming mp3, 13 minutes):

Luigi Boccherini: Symphony in D minor (The House of the Devil

Fishermen at the Gulf of Naples
Fishermen at the Gulf of Naples by

Fishermen at the Gulf of Naples

In 1828 Blechen went to Italy for a journey that unleashed a flood of new images, including many beach scenes, such as the pictures of Neapolitan fisherfolk.

Friedrich Wilhelm III's Palm Court
Friedrich Wilhelm III's Palm Court by

Friedrich Wilhelm III's Palm Court

Far away from the Frenchified classical grandeur of Frederick the Great, for whom the Sanssouci Palace was built in Potsdam, is the bourgeois apparatus of Frederick William III, seen in his “Gothic Moroccan” Palm Court on the on the Pfaueninsel (Peacock Island, an island situated in the Havel river near the Berlin Wannsee). Designed in an opulent late Regency style, this building is a reminder of the many marital and cultural links between Prussia and England.

The Palm Court was unusually realistically recorded in Blechen’s canvas commissioned in 1832 by the arch-conservative king as a gift for his daughter, the Czarina Charlotte. Her collection of German nineteenth-century art is mostly in The Hermitage, St. Petersburg.

Galgenberg
Galgenberg by
Gorge at Amalfi
Gorge at Amalfi by

Gorge at Amalfi

Grotto in the Gulf of Naples
Grotto in the Gulf of Naples by

Grotto in the Gulf of Naples

In the Palm House in Potsdam
In the Palm House in Potsdam by

In the Palm House in Potsdam

Rolling Mill
Rolling Mill by

Rolling Mill

This is one of Blechen’s deft, Impressionistic scenes.

Sanssouci Palace
Sanssouci Palace by

Sanssouci Palace

Scaffold in Storm
Scaffold in Storm by

Scaffold in Storm

Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by

Self-Portrait

This youthful self-portrait shows Blechen long before his life ended at forty-two, after seven years devastated by progressive disease of the nervous system. He died insane in 1840.

Stormy Weather over the Roman Campagna
Stormy Weather over the Roman Campagna by

Stormy Weather over the Roman Campagna

In 1828 Blechen went to Italy for a journey that unleashed a flood of new images. His Stormy Weather over the Roman Campagna is boldly, speedily sketched in oil. It shows the ruins of an ancient aqueduct threading its way along the plain, the snowcapped Alban mountains in the background. Shattered, the elevated waterway suggests a Titanic battle between the forces of humanity and nature, with the latter, as usual, the winner. Elongated in format, this view recalls the vistas of seventeenth-century Dutch masters.

Study for a Funerary Monument
Study for a Funerary Monument by

Study for a Funerary Monument

This is one of Blechen’s several studies of a funerary monument, suggesting grandeur and pathos.

The Bay of Rapallo
The Bay of Rapallo by

The Bay of Rapallo

After 1829-29 Blechen’s impressions of his travels in Italy were already taking him to the verge of naturalism.Occasionally his effects are theatrical, but these derive from the drama of nature itself, like the coming thunderstorm in this picture.

The Woods near Spandau
The Woods near Spandau by

The Woods near Spandau

The Berlin painter Carl Blechen returned from a visit to Italy where, like many young artists, he had practised outdoor oil sketching, to paint very freely handled park and woodland scenes such as The Woods near Spandau.

Tivoli Gardens at the Villa d'Este
Tivoli Gardens at the Villa d'Este by

Tivoli Gardens at the Villa d'Este

Corot was in Rome at the time of Blechen’s Italian travels. Both painters working ‘en plein air’, and new freedom shaped their art. An inevitable view of the Tivoli Gardens at the Villa d’Este escapes the clich�d aspects of that setting.

View of Assisi
View of Assisi by

View of Assisi

The painting depicts the monastery and basilica of San Francesco in the religious pilgrimage town of Assisi in Umbria, the birthplace of St Francis of Assisi.

View of Rooftops and Gardens
View of Rooftops and Gardens by

View of Rooftops and Gardens

This view by Blechen is typical of the earlier-nineteenth-century concern with urban landscapes. It was sketched in Potsdam, so close to, yet far from, the palaces there.

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