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Berlin made him an honorary doctorate, and the long-awaited appointment to the Senate of the
Academy of Arts followed. The art academies in Vienna, Brussels, Milan and Stockholm made him their member. Citizens of Berlin who had rank and name had Liebermann portray them. At the beginning of 1913 Corinth resigned as chairman of the Secession with the entire board, Paul Cassirer was elected chairman. The honorary president tried to prevent this appointment of a non-artist, but did not want to "step into the breach again". Cassirer excluded from the 1913 annual exhibition exactly those members who had voted against him in the general assembly. Unexpectedly, Lovis Corinth sided with them. Liebermann and other founding members of the Secession left the association in this second crisis. In February 1914, the "Free Secession" was finally founded, which continued the tradition of the first Secession movement. There was a hostility between Liebermann and Corinth that was symbolic for the Rumpfsecession and the Free Secession. Corinth tried to take action against Liebermann until his death, and in his autobiography he also drew a deeply disgusted picture of his colleague, who kept withdrawing from the limelight and devoted himself to his garden at Wannsee
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the
November Revolution finally broke out, Liebermann was staying at the house on Pariser Platz. Machine guns of the monarchists were installed in his own house, which is why the soldiers of the revolutionaries attacked the palace. After a bullet went through the wall on the first floor into the drawing room, the defenders surrendered. After this incident, Liebermann brought his valuable picture collection to safety and moved with his wife into their daughter's house for a few weeks. Liebermann took a negative view of the political changes: although he advocated the introduction of equal suffrage in Prussia and democratic-parliamentary reforms at the imperial level, for him "a whole world, albeit a rotten one", collapsed. He had already regretted Bethmann Hollweg's departure in 1917 and saw republicanization as a missed opportunity for a parliamentary monarchy. "We've been through bad times now. Berlin is ragged, dirty, dark in the evening, a dead city, plus soldiers selling matches or cigarettes on Friedrichstrasse or Unter den Linden, blind organ grinders in half-rotten uniforms, in one word: pitiful."
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Hindenburg. Although he did not confess to him politically, he gladly accepted the assignment and felt it was a further honor. The portrait sessions of their peers were characterized by mutual respect and a certain amount of sympathy. In
Hindenburg, the "old master of German modernism" saw a veteran Prussian patriot who could not possibly derail into irrationality. Liebermann wrote: "The other day a Hitler paper wrote – it was sent to me – that it would be unheard of for a Jew to paint the Reich President. I can only laugh at something like that. I'm convinced that when Hindenburg finds out, he'll laugh about it too. I'm just a painter, and what does painting have to do with Judaism?" The writer Paul Eipper held his "studio talks" about his meeting with Liebermann on 25 March 1930 in his house on Pariser Platz in Berlin firmly: "We're talking about Hindenburg. He (Liebermann) is enthusiastic about him."
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618:. After completing this work, he traveled once more to Amsterdam before returning to Munich. Something happened there that "decided his artistic career". He glanced into the garden of the Catholic old man's house, where elderly men in black were sitting on benches in the sunlight. About this moment, Liebermann later said: "It was as if someone were walking on a level path and suddenly stepped on a spiral spring that sprang up". He began to paint the motif, and for the first time used the effect of the light filtered through a canopy (or other barriers), the later so-called "Liebermann's sunspots", that is, the selective representation of (partially) self-colored light to create an atmospheric atmosphere. This prefigured Liebermann's late Impressionist work, which has been compared to the work of
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399:), was made in the months after his return. Painted in dark tones, it shows the prosaic activity of goose plucking. In addition to Munkászy's naturalism, Liebermann also incorporated elements of history painting into it. At the sight of the still unfinished painting his teacher Pauwels dismissed him: he could not teach him anything more. When Liebermann took part in the Hamburg art exhibition with the picture in 1872, his unusual subject aroused disgust and shock. Although the critics praised his skillful painting style, he was criticized as a "painter of the ugly". When the painting was exhibited in Berlin that same year, it met with similar opinions, but a buyer was found in the railway magnate
809:. After he was able to celebrate increasing success, he found the leisure to turn to images of easier life. In 1890 Liebermann received several commissions from Hamburg, all of which could be traced back to Alfred Lichtwark: In addition to a pastel in the Kirchenallee in St. Georg, he got his first portrait commission from there. After completing the painting based on Hals's painting, the sitter, Mayor Carl Friedrich Petersen, was outraged. He found the naturalness of the representation in connection with the apparently casual official dignity bestowed by historicizing clothing repugnant. In Lichtwark's eyes, the mayor's portrait remained "a failure". Liebermann had more success with his work
942:. The first edition showed a lithograph by Liebermann of the masses gathered at the beginning of the war in front of the Berlin City Palace on the occasion of Wilhelm II's "party speech". Liebermann understood the Emperor's words as a call to serve the national cause and at the same time to lower social barriers. During this time, his double outsider role as a Jew and an artist could (at least apparently) be eliminated. Due to the emperor's prosemitic appeal "To my dear Jews", he also felt obliged to civilly participate in the war. The former pioneer of the Secession movement now stood completely on the soil of the empire. He identified with the castle peace policy of the Reich Chancellor
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210:. Beginning in 1920 he was president of the Prussian Academy of Arts. On his 80th birthday, in 1927, Liebermann was celebrated with a large exhibition, declared an honorary citizen of Berlin and hailed in a cover story in Berlin's leading illustrated magazine. But such public accolades were short-lived. In 1933 he resigned when the academy decided to no longer exhibit works by Jewish artists, before he would have been forced to do so under laws restricting the rights of Jews. His art collection, which his wife inherited after his death, was looted by the Nazis after her death in 1943.
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921:, a wealthy suburb of summer homes on the outskirts of Berlin. There he had a country house built for himself by the architect Paul Otto August Baumgarten based on the examples of Hamburg patrician villas. The Liebermann Villa, which he moved into for the first time in the summer of 1910, is what he called his "Schloss am See". Liebermann felt comfortable there and particularly enjoyed his personal design. He particularly enjoyed the large garden, which he and Alfred Lichtwark designed. From the 1910s until his death, images of the gardens dominated his work.
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including expressionism. In the opening speech of the academy exhibition, he said: "Anyone who has experienced the rejection of
Impressionism in his youth will be careful not to condemn a movement that he does not or does not yet understand, especially as head of the academy that although conservative by nature, it would freeze if it behaved in a purely negative manner towards the youth." With this he had returned to the liberality of the time before the secession crisis and was now trying to steer the fate of the academy with tolerance.
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Hofmannsthal. Never before has a German artist been honored by his hometown in such a way as Berlin did with the more than 100 paintings by
Liebermann's birthday exhibition. His life's work now appeared classic, the formerly provocative style in 1927 looked like documents from a bygone era. This is why the old Liebermann countered critics who accused him of seclusion and conservatism in the exhibition catalog: "The curse of our time is the addiction to the new : the true artist strives for nothing else than: to become who he is."
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1302:, for which he was the largest collector in Germany. Both Liebermann and many of his collectors were persecuted by the Nazis and their agents because they were Jewish. Artworks were stolen from his Jewish collectors and many have never been recovered. Liebermann's own extensive collection, which he bequeathed to his wife, Martha, after his death, was later looted from her apartment. Martha committed suicide in 1943 after she learned she was going to be deported to
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798:. The German press reproached him for serving up the idea of revolution. The old Adolph Menzel again took Liebermann's side, and the first presentation of non-official German art on French soil took place. The world exhibition finally brought Liebermann into the limelight. In Paris he was honored with a medal of honor and admission to the Société des Beaux-Arts. He only refused the accolade of the Legion of Honor out of consideration for the Prussian government.
327:, whose passionate ideas fascinated the millionaire's son. In 1866 Max Liebermann graduated from high school. He later claimed to have been a bad student and had difficulty with getting through the exams: in truth, he was not one of the better students in mathematics, but his participation in the higher grades was considered "decent and well-mannered". In the Abitur exams he came fourth in his class, but in his family Max always felt like a "bad student".
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587:. The pictures that were shown there had one thing in common: the representation of people working peacefully side by side in a harmonious community. Liebermann did not find the mood shown in the surroundings of Munich, which was heated up by antisemitic hostility, but tried to absorb it in his annual stays in the Netherlands. In 1879 he also traveled to the Dachauer Moos, Rosenheim and the Inn Valley for painting stays, where his painting
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representative appeared at his funeral at the Schönhauser Allee Jewish cemetery on 11 February 1935 – neither from the academy nor from the city, of which he had been an honorary citizen since 1927. The
Gestapo had even forbidden participation in the funeral in advance, fearing that it might turn into a demonstration for artistic freedom. Nevertheless, almost 100 friends and relatives came. Among the mourners were Käthe Kollwitz,
531:. He had already made the first sketches for this work in the synagogues of Amsterdam and Venice. Never before had he staged a picture with such care: he combined the studies of the synagogue interiors with individual figures, of which he previously made nude studies, in order to then bring them together dressed. He immersed the subject in an almost mystical light, which seems to emanate from the baby Jesus as the shining center.
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of the war you didn't think twice about it. People were united in solidarity with their country. I know well that the socialists have a different view. I've never been a socialist, and you don't become one anymore at my age. I received my entire upbringing here, and I spent my entire life in this house, which my parents already lived in. And the German fatherland also lives in my heart as an inviolable and immortal concept."
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423:. In the world capital of art, he wanted to make contacts with leading realists and impressionists. But the French painters refused to have any contact with the German Liebermann. In 1874 he submitted his goose plucking to the Salon de Paris, where the picture was accepted but received negative reviews in the press, especially from a nationalist point of view. Liebermann first spent the summer of 1874 in
563:. In response to the criticism, Liebermann painted over the picture by redesigning the young Jesus. A photograph of the original shows a child clad in a shorter cloak and with sidelocks and head slightly pushed forward and without sandals; the overpainted picture shows Jesus in an upright posture with longer hair and a longer robe and sandals. Although the original version had been reproduced in
298:. The family attended church services in the reform community and increasingly turned away from the more orthodox way of life of their grandfather. Although the Liebermanns' house had large salons and numerous bedrooms, the parents encouraged their three sons to sleep in a common room. This was also provided with a glass window in the wall so that the schoolwork could be supervised from outside.
1078:, which emotionally depicted the horror of the world war and which was accused of being a "tendentious work"; for Liebermann it was "one of the most important works of the post-war period". At the same time, despite his basically tolerant views, he polemicized against Ludwig Justi, who brought Expressionists to the Nationalgalerie for an exhibition. In September 1926, Liebermann wrote in the
1066:'s "Rabbi von Bacharach" in addition to numerous paintings of his garden and drawings in memory of fallen Jewish soldiers at the front. In 1923 Liebermann was accepted into the order Pour le MĂ©rite. On 7 October 1924, his younger brother Felix Liebermann, who had also been a friend of his life, died. Only two days later he had to mourn the death of his relative
312:. Out of boredom, he asked for a pen and began to draw. Even as an old woman, Antonie Volkmar was proud to have discovered Liebermann. His parents were not enthusiastic about painting, but at least in this case their son did not refuse to attend schools. On his afternoons off school, Max received private painting lessons from Eduard Holbein and Carl Steffeck.
468:. It became Liebermann's habit to allow much time to pass between the idea and the execution of larger paintings. It was only when he returned to Paris in the autumn of 1875 and moved into a larger studio that he took up what he had seen and created his first painting of bathing fishermen's boys, a subject he would revisit years later.
961:. Even before the outbreak of war, Liebermann had been the undisputed portrait painter of the Berlin upper class. In this way, an enormous oeuvre of portraits was created that cemented Liebermann's reputation as a painter of his era. For his great enthusiasm for the war, however, he later had to take strong criticism. The art writer
457:, which he did not complete until years later. Ultimately, he tried to follow in Millet's footsteps and, in the opinion of contemporary critics, lagged behind him with his own achievements: The depiction of the workers in their environment seemed unnatural; it seemed as if they were added to the landscape at a later date.
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coronation". The director of the
National Gallery, Ludwig Justi (Tschudis' successor), promised him his own cabinet. Wilhelm II agreed to the birthday exhibition and awarded Liebermann the Order of the Red Eagle, 3rd class. The honoree noted with satisfaction that His Majesty had buried the hatchet against modern art.
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illnesses. His parents showed him affection and support, but he was aware of their greater regard for his older, more "sensible" brother Georg. Max's talent for drawing did not mean much to his parents: When his works were first published, the father forbade the 13-year-old from signing the name
Liebermann on them.
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The portrait of Martha
Liebermann is on a Gestapo list of objects seized from her apartment after her death, according to Jutta von Falkenhausen, a lawyer who represents the Liebermann heirs. Georg Schäfer purchased it in 1955 from a Munich dealer. The Liebermann family first tried to recover it more
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In autumn 1914, Liebermann was one of the 93 signatories, mostly professors, writers and artists, of the appeal "To the cultural world!", in which German war crimes were rejected with a six-fold "It's not true!". After the war, he expressed himself self-critically about this appeal: "At the beginning
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and the Neue KĂĽnstlervereinigung MĂĽnchen joined the New
Secession. In the spring of 1911 Liebermann fled to Rome before the Secession crisis in Berlin. The death of his friend Jozef Israëls also fell at this time. The criticism of his leadership style grew louder until it finally came from within his
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In 1884 Liebermann decided to return to his hometown Berlin, although he was aware that this would lead to inevitable conflicts. In his opinion, sooner or later Berlin would take on the role of the capital from an artistic point of view, as the largest art market was located there and he increasingly
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After graduating from high school, Liebermann enrolled at the Friedrich Wilhelm University. He chose chemistry, in which his cousin Carl Liebermann had also been successful. The chemistry course served as a pretext to be able to devote himself to art. Instead of attending the lectures, he rode out in
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for the first time. The Secession Committee stood behind its president and called Nolde's approach a "blatant hypocrisy". A general assembly was called, which voted 40 to 2 for the exclusion of Nolde. Liebermann himself had voted against the exclusion and stated in a defense speech: "I am absolutely
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He withdrew from the public eye, while hardly any of his companions stood by him and remained loyal. Only Käthe Kollwitz was still looking for access to him. One last self-portrait was created in 1934. Liebermann confessed to one of his last visitors: "I only live out of hate. I no longer look out
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After the end of the war and the revolution, Liebermann took over the office of President of the Berlin Academy of the Arts in 1920. The secessions continued to exist in parallel until they fell apart almost silently. Liebermann tried to unite the various currents under the umbrella of the academy,
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Three weeks after the outbreak of the First World War, the 67-year-old Liebermann wrote: "I continue to work as calmly as possible, in the opinion that I thereby serve the general best." Despite such statements, he was gripped by general patriotism. He devoted himself to artistic war propaganda and
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In 1889 the world exhibition took place in Paris on the occasion of the centenary of the French Revolution. The monarchies of Russia, Great Britain and Austria-Hungary refused to participate because they rejected the celebration of the revolution. When the Germans Gotthardt Kuehl, Karl Koepping and
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did not bring him the desired success. The art scene in the metropolis could not give Liebermann anything; it had even rejected him as an artist on chauvinistic reasons. His paintings had not become "French". In contrast, his regular stays in Holland were more influential. Liebermann made the final
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In his various capacities as a leader in the artistic community, Liebermann spoke out often for the separation of art and politics. In the words of arts reporter and critic, Grace Glueck, he "pushed for the right of artists to do their own thing, unconcerned with politics or ideology." His interest
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On 7 May 1933 Liebermann resigned from his honorary presidency, senatorial posts and membership in the Prussian Academy of the Arts, explaining to the press: "During my long life I have tried, with all my might, to serve German art. In my opinion, art has nothing to do with politics or ancestry. I
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Due to illness, Liebermann resigned his post as president of the academy in 1932, but was also elected honorary president. Through the treatment of his friend Ferdinand Sauerbruch (Sauerbruch made Liebermann's trapped hernia disappear in the Charité, on which occasion Liebermann had also portrayed
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In 1927 Liebermann came back into the public eye: the media and the art world celebrated him and his work on the occasion of his 80th birthday. Among the well-wishers were the Berlin veteran Zille as well as international greats such as Albert Einstein, Heinrich and Thomas Mann as well as Hugo von
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On 18 January 1918, the opening ceremony of the Max Liebermann Cabinet of the National Gallery took place. The inauguration speech was given by the Minister of Education, Friedrich Schmidt-Ott. A few weeks later, 500,000 workers struck in Berlin alone – the Reich was on the verge of upheaval. When
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in 1915 and 1917. After 1913 he no longer spent the summers in the Netherlands, but at the Wannsee, while in the winter he lived at Pariser Platz. His family did not suffer hardship, even if they used the flower beds of his country house to grow vegetables because of the insecurity of supplies. In
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At the Paris Salon in 1880 "he was the first German to receive an honorable mention for this work". In addition, Léon Maître, an important Impressionist collector, acquired several paintings by Liebermann. Encouraged by the longed-for success, he turned to an earlier topic: Using older studies, he
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In 1873 Liebermann saw farmers harvesting beets at the gates of Weimar. He decided to capture this motif in oil, but when Karl Gussow cynically advised him not to paint the picture, Liebermann scratched it from the canvas. He felt powerless and without drive. Liebermann decided to visit the famous
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In April 1916 Liebermann's essay "The Fantasy in Painting" appeared for the first time in book form. In the rewritten introduction he wrote: "Were the aesthetic views more confused than they are today? – Where a younger art historian Wilhelm Worringer writes from the trenches of Flanders that war
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In May 1884 he was engaged to Martha Marckwald (1857–1943), who was the sister of his sister-in-law. The wedding ceremony took place on 14 September after the move from Munich to Berlin had been completed. The couple lived together for the first time, In den Zelten 11, on the northern edge of the
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The first post-Liebermann's annual Secession exhibition in 1912, under the chairmanship of Corinth, was unsuccessful. Liebermann again spent the summer of the year in Noordwijk. During a stay in The Hague, Queen Wilhelmina awarded him the House Order of Orange. The Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität
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In May 1887 the picture was exhibited at the Paris Salon, where it was received with only muted applause. At the international anniversary exhibition in Munich, a critic described the painting as "the real representation of dull infirmity caused by a monotony of hard work. Peasant women in worn
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e for a cure with her daughter, which gave her husband the opportunity to study in Holland. He returned to Laren, where flax was made from raw linen in peasant cottages. Impressed by the subject of the collaborative work, Liebermann began to draw sketches and paint a first version in oil. In his
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After eight years of absence from Berlin, Liebermann took part in the exhibition of the Academy of the Arts again for the first time in 1886. For the exhibition he selected the paintings Freetime in the Amsterdam Orphanage, Altmannhaus in Amsterdam and The grace period. The grace of grace, which
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Autre cas avec un tableau de Max Lieberman vendu par le collectionneur d'art Max Silberberg en 1934. Il a été établi que la vente a eu lieu sous la contrainte des nazis. Le Musée d'art de Coire, qui avait reçu en donation la peinture en 1992, a décidé en 2000 de la retourner à l'héritier de Max
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In the family, Max was not considered particularly intelligent. At school, his mind often wandered, and he gave inappropriate answers to questions his teachers asked him. This resulted in teasing from classmates which became unbearable for him, so that he took refuge several times in supposed
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honored Liebermann with the eagle shield of the German Reich "as a token of the thanks that the German people owe you". Interior Minister Walter von Keudell presented him with the Golden State Medal embossed with "For services to the state". At the end of 1927, Liebermann portrayed President
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In 1917 the Prussian Academy of the Arts dedicated a large retrospective of his work to Liebermann for his 70th birthday. Almost 200 paintings were shown in the exhibition. Julius Elias, whose wife Julie Elias dedicated her famous cookbook to Liebermann, called the honors for the painter "a
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overview publication for decades the overpainting was not discovered until 1993. The discovery of the overpainting initiated an intensive discussion about the reasons for Liebermann's choice of a historical subject (coined since centuries by the Christian iconography) in view of the growing
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was of great importance for the development of Impressionism. Liebermann turned away from the old-fashioned, heavy painting of Munkácsy, more interested in the methods of the Barbizon School than in the motives that influenced them: In Barbizon, for example, he remembered the Weimar study
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His death was not covered in the media, which had already been brought into line, and was only mentioned in passing – if at all. The Academy of Arts, which in the meantime had become an instrument of the National Socialists, refused to honor the former president. For example, no official
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because a badly healed broken arm prevented him from regular military service, and served as a medic during the siege of Metz. In 1870/1871 a total of 12,000 Jews went to war on the German side. The experiences on the battlefields shocked the young artist, whose enthusiasm for war waned.
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957:. The only condition was advocacy of the castle peace policy of Chancellor Bethmann Hollweg. The further the war progressed, the greater was Liebermann's retreat into private life, to his country house on the Wannsee. But portrait painting was initially limited to the military, like
375:, whose realistic depiction of women plucking wool, a simple everyday scene, aroused Liebermann's interest. Financed by his brother Georg, he traveled to the Netherlands, Amsterdam and Scheveningen for the first time, where he was inspired by the light, the people and the landscape.
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describing Jesus as "the ugliest, most impertinent Jewish boy imaginable." While the later Prince Regent Luitpold sided with Liebermann, the conservative MP and priest Balthasar von Daller denied him as a Jew the right to represent Jesus in this way. In Berlin, the court preacher
344:, which exmatriculated Liebermann on 22 January 1868 because of "study failure". After an intense conflict with his father, who was not impressed by his son's path, In 1869 his parents made it possible for him to study painting and drawing at the Grand Ducal Saxon Art School in
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returned a painting to the Max Liebermann estate, decades after the masterpiece was looted from a Jewish museum in Nazi Germany. Liebermann had loaned his painting to the Jewish Museum in Berlin in the 1930s. The work, along with many others, disappeared from the museum during
708:, his later adversary, also voted for his admission. In August 1885 Liebermann's only daughter was born, who was given the name "Marianne Henriette Käthe", but was only called Käthe. He painted little during this time, as he devoted himself entirely to the role of father.
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From that time on, Liebermann was a famous artist, but his painterly advances came to a standstill during his stay in Holland in 1879: The light in a view of a rural village street that was created at that time appears pale and unnatural. In 1880 he took part in the
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the surgeon in the draft), Liebermann's neighbor at Wannsee since 1928, the painter recovered. The portraits that he made of Sauerbruch represent the conclusion of his portrait work and are also its climax. For the last time he turned to an individually new motif.
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wrote about the lithographs during the war: "Today some people give up their cow and cabbage and suddenly discover new motifs during the war, others come up with the idea of handing their polo players a saber and imagine that this is how you create a winner."
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in the spring of the three emperor year. From the death of Friedrich III. dismayed, he painted a fictional memorial service for Emperor Friedrich III. in Bad Kösen, which shows that, despite his left-wing political views, he developed profound sympathy to the
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After primary school, Liebermann switched to the Dorotheenstädtische Realschule. He passed the time more and more by drawing, which his parents cautiously encouraged. When Max was ten years old, his father Louis bought the imposing Palais Liebermann, at
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Max Liebermann were appointed to the jury, this caused political explosive in Berlin. Liebermann inquired of the Prussian minister of education Gustav von Goßler, who let him do it – tantamount to unofficial support. At the same time, the newspaper
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the zoo and painted. At Carl Steffeck, he was also and allowed to perform assistant tasks more and more frequently in the design of monumental battle pictures. There he met Wilhelm Bode, who later became Liebermann's sponsor and director of the
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died, who as one of the founders had been an important pillar of the Secession. Liebermann's health deteriorated from the spring of 1909, and while he went to Karlsbad for a cure, a generational conflict broke out between Impressionists and
1002:. His illustrative style describes the atmosphere at turning points in dramaturgy and was not designed for narration, which is why he did not make a breakthrough in this area and soon stopped working on illustrations for ten years.
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In view of the need to rebuild the collapsed imperial institution, Liebermann succeeded in providing it with a democratic structure, a free educational system and, at the same time, greater public attention. Through his advocacy,
1287:. According to Saul Friedländer, only three "Aryan" artists attended the funeral. In his funeral speech, Karl Scheffler pointed out that Liebermann was not just burying a great artist, but an epoch for which he was symbolic.
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Berlin studio he composed the studies for a painting in larger format, on which he was able to complete work in the spring of 1887. The representation of collective work should show the "heroically patient" in everyday life.
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Under the pressure of being accountable to his parents and himself, Liebermann fell into deep depression in Paris, and was often close to despair. During this time only a few pictures were made, and his participation in the
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in the Wannsee district of Berlin. The artist's wife, Martha Liebermann, was forced to sell the villa in 1940. On 5 March 1943, at the age of 85 and bedridden from a stroke, she was notified to get ready for deportation to
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published an essay on the exhibition in the Berliner Tageblatt: "In Liebermann, the new, metropolitan mechanized Prussia paints itself. It had to be a person of spirit and will, of struggle, of passion and reflection."
858:. In 1910, the Secession board under Liebermann rejected 27 Expressionist images, and the former rebel now seemed a conservative spokesman. At the same time he initiated the disintegration of the Secession movement.
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Frübis, Hildegard (2019). "Der 'Fall' Liebermann. Entangled histories – Antisemitismus und Antimoderne im Streit um das Gemälde 'Der zwölfjährige Jesus im Tempel' (1879)". In König, Mareike; Schulz, Oliver (eds.).
1082:. In the Yom Kippur edition he publicly confessed to his faith, to which he increasingly found his way back in old age. He also supported the Jewish children's home "Ahawah" and the aid association of German Jews.
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there. In this work, too, his clear turn to light painting is manifested, but at the same time he remained true to his earlier work depictions by continuing to dispense with transfigurative, romantic elements. The
862:, representing the counterpart in this conflict, accused Liebermann of a fundamental hostility towards progress and of dictatorial power within the secession. Nonetheless, the Secession in 1910 exhibited works by
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His painting of a Semitic-looking boy Jesus conferring with Jewish scholars sparked a wave of indignation. At the International Art Show in Munich it was denounced for its supposed blasphemy, with a critic in the
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Liebermann was the largest collector of French Impressionism in Germany – and his cosmopolitan outlook and his art created strong antipathies towards both by political and cultural conservatives throughout his
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aprons and wooden slippers, with faces that hardly show that they were young, the features of grim old age, lie in the chamber, the beams of which are oppressively weighed down, their mechanical daily work."
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Nevertheless, he continued to advocate artistic progressiveness and political art, even though his own works were regarded as "classics" or disapprovingly as old-fashioned. He supported Otto Dix's painting
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from its beginning in 1898. The Secession was a group of progressive artists who formed an independent exhibition society to promote modern art. Liebermann recruited prominent German Impressionists such as
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zoo. However, the honeymoon did not lead to Italy, as was customary at the time, but via Braunschweig and Wiesbaden to Scheveningen in Holland. There Jozef Israëls joined the two; together they traveled to
487:, Liebermann already uses the effect of light in an impressionistic way. He got to know the Portuguese synagogue in Amsterdam through Professor August Allebé, which led him to a painterly analysis of his
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Through his own efforts to save Nolde's honor, Liebermann had wanted to make his tolerance clear, but the split in the Secession movement could not be stopped. On the initiative of the Berlin painter
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On the advice of the Swiss banker Adolf Jöhr, he was able to deposit the 14 most important works of his art collection from May 1933 at the Kunsthaus Zürich, where Wilhelm Wartmann was director.
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May 1915, Käthe Liebermann, the painter's now almost 30-year-old daughter, married the diplomat Kurt Riezler, who, as an advisor to Bethmann Hollweg, had close contacts in politics. In that year
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At this time, the art critic Emil Heilbut published a "study on naturalism and Max Liebermann", in which he described the painter as "the bravest forerunner of the new art in Germany".
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in Vienna, where he stayed for only two days. Instead, he was determined to turn his back on Germany and its art scene, which Liebermann regarded at the time as backward and outdated.
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and other artists, including Nolde, the New Secession was formed. On 15 May, it mounted its first exhibition under the title "Rejected by the Secession Berlin 1910". Painters from
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concentration camp. About six months later, the Gestapo confiscated most of Liebermann's famous private art collection. The Palais Liebermann on Pariser Platz soon sank in ruins.
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on the throne. With his reign there were hopes that Prussia would transform into a parliamentary monarchy, which ended only 99 days later with his death. Max Liebermann stayed in
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Instead of allowing himself to be absorbed by Impressionism, Liebermann stepped back from the sphere of popular light painting and turned back to the naturalism of Leibl in his
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in 1916 changed its name to "Bildermann", Liebermann gave up his participation. Instead, he dealt with illustration for the first time: In 1916 and 1917, he produced works on
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In 1851 the Liebermanns moved to BehrenstraĂźe, from where Max attended a nearby humanistic toddler school. Soon he hated this, as he did every later educational institution.
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He joined the German Society in 1914, in which public figures came together for political and private exchange under the chairmanship of the liberal-conservative politician
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Liebermann died on 8 February 1935 in his house on Pariser Platz. Käthe Kollwitz reported that he fell asleep quietly at seven in the evening. The death mask was made by
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Liebermann was a popular subject for painters, photographers and caricaturists throughout his life. In addition to Lovis Corinth, he was also painted by the Swede
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shows a Dutch peasant family praying in a gloomy, atmospheric setting, was made at the suggestion of Jozef Israël during their honeymoon. The "opinion maker"
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Claims for restitution for Nazi-looted art have been filed by both Max Liebermann's heirs and the heirs of his Jewish patrons whose collections were looted.
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Carl and Felicie Bernstein lived across from the Liebermann family. At his exceptionally cultivated neighbors, Liebermann saw paintings by Édouard Manet and
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The Liebermann family has been trying to recover a portrait of Martha Liebermann that was on a Gestapo list of objects seized from her apartment for years.
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died, as it were as a symbol of an ending era, as did Liebermann's cousin Emil Rathenau. The founding generation parted, and a new era was about to begin.
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Max Liebermann was a son of a wealthy Jewish fabric manufacturer turned banker, Louis Liebermann, and his wife Philippine (née Haller). His grandfather
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Boskamp, Katrin (1993). "Die ursprüngliche Fassung von Max Liebermanns: Der zwölfjährige Jesus im Tempel. Ein christliches Thema aus jüdischer Sicht".
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of Frau Liebermann, a concrete cube in place of a grave, commemorates her life while recognizing her as a victim of Nazi extermination or persecution.
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in Germany and continental Europe. In addition to his activity as an artist, he also assembled an important collection of French Impressionist works.
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The city of Berlin granted him honorary citizenship, which, however, was heatedly contested in the city council. On his birthday, Reich President
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In the summer of 1876 there was another stay of several months in the Netherlands, where he continued his studies. In Amsterdam he met the etcher
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did by signing the urgent appeal in June 1932. "The natural thing would be to escape. But for me, as a Jew, that would be viewed as cowardice."
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tried to meet Liebermann in Zweeloo, but he did not succeed. Back from the Netherlands, he followed Countess von Maltzan's call to Militsch in
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was murdered by right-wing activists. Liebermann was deeply disturbed by the murder of his relative and companion. He made lithographs for
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with the leadership of the Secession. This decision anticipated the end of the Secession and sealed the decline of German Impressionism.
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found a buyer in Jean-Baptiste Faure in the Paris Salon in 1882. The French press celebrated him as an impressionist. The collector
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during a visit to the class at the Fridericianum in Kassel. Rembrandt had a lasting influence on the style of the young Liebermann.
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in French Realism was offputting to conservatives, for whom such openness suggested what they thought of as Jewish cosmopolitanism.
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When Louis Liebermann commissioned his wife to paint an oil painting in 1859, Max Liebermann accompanied his mother to the painter
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Max Liebermann – Der "Jüdische Maler" in Preußen. Der Begriff der Jüdischen Kunst in der Kunstgeschichte: Versuch einer Definition
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The German Lost Art Foundation lists hundreds of artworks that were either created by or owned by Max Liebermann in its official
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against the exclusion of the writer, even at the risk that similar motives could lead to such so-called 'younger opposition'".
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From Whitsun 1871, Liebermann stayed in DĂĽsseldorf, where the influence of French art was stronger than in Berlin. There he met
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was discovered in Munich in 2013, one of the first artworks to be proven to have been looted by the Nazis was Liebermann's
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monarchy. He wanted to be a free spirit, but he was unable to reject the Prussian traditions because of his character.
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came into force, which granted the Jews in Prussia greater rights. He had five siblings, including the older brother
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Like other Jewish artists, Liebermann was persecuted as a Jew, and his works were removed from public collections.
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Liebermann's grave in Berlin. The German text, "Ich lasse dich nicht, Du segnest mich denn", is from Genesis 32:26.
520:– with whom he stayed in Venice for three months and finally followed them to the Bavarian capital, which with the
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1926:. Schriften aus der Max Weber Stiftung (in German). Vol. 1. Göttingen: V&R unipress. pp. 151–168.
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continued the antisemitic debate about the painting. A few important artist colleagues took his side, including
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As a secondary school, Louis Liebermann chose the Friedrichwerdersche Gymnasium for his sons, where the sons of
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164:(20 July 1847 – 8 February 1935) was a German painter and printmaker, and one of the leading proponents of
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made a bronze bust in 1912, which was exhibited in 1917 at the Great Berlin Art Exhibition in DĂĽsseldorf.
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can no longer belong to the Prussian Academy of the Arts...since my point of view is no longer valued."
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Liebermann did not want to risk defending himself against the incipient change in cultural policy — as
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In 1878 Liebermann went on a trip to Italy for the first time. In Venice he wanted to look at works by
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As a Jew, not as a degenerate artist, he was defamed, his works of art removed from public collections
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in Berlin, and the following year he was elected to the academy. From 1899 to 1911 he led the premier
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German masters of the nineteenth century: paintings and drawings from the Federal Republic of Germany
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Studien zum Frühwerk von Max Liebermann mit einem Verzeichnis der Gemälde und Ölstudien von 1866–1889
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Liebermann came up with the plan to present the first guard of German painting with Menzel, Leibl,
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own ranks: On 16 November 1911, Liebermann himself resigned as President of the Berlin Secession.
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in Holland. In Haarlem he developed a brighter and more spontaneous style by copying paintings by
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in New York mounted the first major museum exhibition in the United States of Liebermann's work.
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decides not only for the existence of Germany, but also for the victory of Expressionism." When
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War of 1870–71 he was briefly gripped by the general patriotic frenzy. He volunteered for the
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swissinfo.ch, Michèle Laird, Traduction de l'anglais: Frédéric Burnand (7 November 2013).
2443:"Nähschule – Max Silberberg Heirs and Bündner Kunstmuseum Chur — Centre du droit de l'art"
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Saul Friedländer: Das Dritte Reich und die Juden, Beck’sche Reihe, München 2010, Seite 24
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2519:". Liebermann-Villa on Lake Wannsee. liebermann-villa.de. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
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described Liebermann as a great talent and an outstanding representative of modernism.
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in order to find new orientation. There he met a group of Munich painters – among them
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In addition to his own art, Liebermann was an important collector of art, notably of
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University of Berlin, with additional studies in Weimar, Paris and the Netherlands
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2082:. Jutta Bohnke-Kollwitz (ed.). btb, Munich 2007. entry from the 9 February 1935.
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had studied. In 1862, 15-year-old Max attended an event by the young socialist
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On 30 April 2006, the Max Liebermann Society opened a permanent museum in the
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and Willy Liebermann von Wahlendorf. Only three days after Max's birth, the
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Liebermann was honored on his 50th birthday with a solo exhibition at the
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for her in front of their former home by the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin.
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stoked a campaign in Paris against the general participation of Prussia.
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After his return he was accepted into the Association of Berlin Artists.
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the window of this room – I don't want to see the new world around me."
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origins. The first studies of the Amsterdam orphanage were also made.
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In the summer of 1880, Liebermann traveled to the Brabant village of
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2351:"Reunion with looted painting is 'second victory against the Nazis'"
2006:
Keller, K. (1912), "Gustav Adolf Hirn. Sein Leben und seine Werke",
1839:(in German). Munich: G.J. Göschen'sche Verlagshandlung. p. 633.
1690:, Vervuert Verlagsgesellschaft, pp. 159–176, 31 December 1988,
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His daughter, Katharina Riezler, fled to the United States in 1938.
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Liebermann never left Berlin with the exception of two spa stays in
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antisemitism, as well as Liebermann's own relationship to Judaism.
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In December 1873 Liebermann moved to Paris and set up a studio in
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2012:, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, pp. 3–43,
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Antisemitismus im 19. Jahrhundert aus internationaler Perspektive
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In the fall, Liebermann traveled again to Dongen to complete the
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2270:"Nazi Controversy Stirred as Liebermann Heirs Slam Auction Sale"
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2295:"She Tracked Nazi-Looted Art. She Quit When No One Returned It"
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578:, 1879, original version, as reproduced in Muther's publication
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2245:"Unusual Case of Nazi-looted Artwork That Turned Up in Israel"
2220:"Lost Art Internet Database – Einfache Suche _ Max Liebermann"
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30 January 1933 was the day when power was handed over to the
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2537:, official website. (9 June 2005) Retrieved 2 January 2018.
2404:"ART INSTITUTE TAKES INITIATIVE ON WORKS LOOTED IN NAZI ERA"
614:. There studies emerged that he later used for his painting
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Writer, Kirsten Scharnberg, Tribune Staff (10 March 2000).
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Brand, Bettina (2003). "Liebermann, Max". Grove Art Online.
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that had belonged to the Jewish collector David Friedmann.
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348:. There he became a student of the Belgian history painter
2164:"Kunsthandel: Mehr Licht in die Dunkelkammern von Museen"
1869:(in German). Hildesheim: Georg Olms AG. pp. 75–115.
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Ich kann gar nicht soviel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte.
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2108:"The Liebermann collection stored in the Wiesbaden CCP?"
2049:"The Liebermann collection stored in the Wiesbaden CCP?"
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Terrace in the Garden near the Wannsee towards Northwest
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The son of a Jewish banker, Liebermann studied art in
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When the art hoard of the son of Hitler's art dealer
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The 12-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple With the Scholars
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2325:"First Painting Resituted from Gurlitt Goes on Sale"
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1572:"A Berlin Painter, Jewish and Proudly Assimilated"
661:(1882–83). While he was working on this painting,
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2133:"Max Liebermann: Modern Art and Modern Germany"
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3892:Recipients of the Pour le MĂ©rite (civil class)
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1967:. Berlin, Boston: De Gruyter. pp. 76–84.
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2622:Gallery of Liebermann's paintings at zeno.org
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2377:"First Two Works From Gurlitt Trove Returned"
1790:Max Liebermann: Modern Art and Modern Germany
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453:, looked for a similar motif and created the
435:, Corot and above all Millet did even more."
183:, as well as aspects of his garden near Lake
2652:(11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
2501:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
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2427:: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
2009:Gustav Adolf Hirn Sein Leben und seine Werke
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1904:: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
1837:Geschichte der Malerei im XIX. Jahrhundert
1757:. Vol. 14. Duncker & Humblot, Berlin.
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644:Recreation Time in the Amsterdam Orphanage
628:Recreation Time in the Amsterdam Orphanage
604:Recreation Time in the Amsterdam Orphanage
527:In December 1878 Liebermann began work on
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2469:"Les musées suisses face au pillage nazi"
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1618:"A dramatic life; the work, not quite so"
460:In 1875 Liebermann spent three months in
3882:Artists from the Province of Brandenburg
3867:German people of the Franco-Prussian War
2740:The Garden of the Orphanage in Amsterdam
2657:Newspaper clippings about Max Liebermann
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2724:The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple
2190:"Newly Recovered Art Has Poignant Tale"
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576:The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple
540:The Twelve-Year-Old Jesus in the Temple
340:. He studied law and philosophy at the
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2627:Guide to the Max Liebermann Collection
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2748:Portrait of the Painter Lovis Corinth
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2162:Buomberger, Thomas (September 2015).
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1894:. University of Knoxville, Tennessee.
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832:Liebermann was the president of the
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1996:geni.com. Retrieved 2 January 2018.
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1616:Ollman, Leah (30 September 2005).
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2532:"Ein Stein fĂĽr Martha Liebermann"
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1481:Restaurant Terrace in Nienstedten
1364:Theresienstadt concentration camp
630:(1881–82), also with "sunspots".
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2580:Works by or about Max Liebermann
1892:Max Liebermann's Jewish Heritage
1765:. p. 482–495; here: p. 482.
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1688:KRTU und andere Prosadichtungen
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936:Kriegzeit – Künstlerflugblätter
801:In 1889 Liebermann traveled to
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2550:Museum returns looted painting
2535:Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
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3872:German Impressionist painters
3776:Racial policy of Nazi Germany
3206:Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté
2631:Leo Baeck Institute, New York
1994:Martha Liebermann (Marckwald)
1542:
1449:Riding Donkey at the Seashore
944:Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg
444:practiced by painters of the
415:Paris, Barbizon and Amsterdam
3857:20th-century German painters
3842:19th-century German painters
2604:3 artworks by Max Liebermann
331:Student life and early works
217:
7:
3375:French impressionist cinema
2661:20th Century Press Archives
2595:(public domain audiobooks)
2018:10.1007/978-3-642-94411-6_1
10:
3923:
3771:Censorship in Nazi Germany
3416:Pennsylvania Impressionism
2964:
1932:10.14220/9783737009775.151
1745:Kunisch, Hermann (1985). "
1696:10.31819/9783964564351-039
1385:
682:Old Houses in Scheveningen
650:wrote enthusiastically to
455:Potato Harvest in Barbizon
407:history and salon painter
391:His first large painting,
206:formation in Germany, the
16:German painter (1847–1935)
3763:
3542:
3526:Degenerate Art Exhibition
3518:
3470:Pays des Impressionnistes
3439:
3383:
3357:
3264:Giovanni Battista Ciolina
3239:
3177:
3120:
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3006:
2975:
2885:
2817:
2782:
2766:
2707:
1973:10.1515/9783110693980-005
1890:Rouskova, Romana (2008).
1788:Deshmukh, Marion (2017).
1359:Liebermann family's villa
1259:, Leo Klein von Diepold,
1089:His work was part of the
1080:JĂĽdisch-Liberalen Zeitung
503:
500:decision to leave Paris.
150:
145:
135:
125:
117:
113:Painting and print-making
109:
101:
93:
71:
46:
30:
23:
3907:20th-century German Jews
3837:19th-century German Jews
3796:Museum of Fine Arts Bern
3406:Decorative Impressionism
3401:California Impressionism
2802:Carl Theodore Liebermann
2080:Die Tagebücher 1908–1943
1865:Boskamp, Katrin (1994).
1835:Muther, Richard (1894).
1755:Neue Deutsche Biographie
1348:Skirball Cultural Center
1238:
589:Brannenburger Biergarten
222:
200:Prussian Academy of Arts
3680:Elfriede Lohse-Wächtler
3426:Synthetic impressionism
3391:Amsterdam Impressionism
3216:Helen Galloway McNicoll
3067:Frederick Carl Frieseke
2756:Two Riders on the Beach
2649:Encyclopædia Britannica
2643:"Liebermann, Max"
2589:Works by Max Liebermann
2571:Works by Max Liebermann
2196:. Wall Street Journal.
1465:Two Riders on the Beach
1350:in Los Angeles and the
1329:Two Riders on the Beach
934:drew for the newspaper
748:Bad Homburg vor der Höh
438:The landscape painting
429:Forest of Fontainebleau
401:Bethel Henry Strousberg
338:Kaiser Friedrich Museum
233:National Gallery of Art
3531:Degenerate Art auction
3097:Walter Elmer Schofield
2170:(in Swiss High German)
1115:
1109:Portrait of President
992:The Man of Fifty Years
914:
829:
685:
607:
579:
544:
388:
235:
3750:Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
3640:Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
3324:Władysław Podkowiński
3062:William Merritt Chase
2953:Pierre-Auguste Renoir
2732:Bleaching on the Lawn
1401:Bleaching on the Lawn
1300:French Impressionists
1138:and several times by
1107:
1046:Karl Schmidt-Rottluff
909:
824:
680:
602:
574:
551:Augsburger Allgemeine
537:
451:Arbeiter im RĂĽbenfeld
381:
231:Self-Portrait, 1906,
230:
3852:German male painters
3827:Painters from Berlin
3630:Alexej von Jawlensky
3231:Robert Wakeham Pilot
3221:James Wilson Morrice
3102:John Henry Twachtman
2716:Women Plucking Geese
2517:The Liebermann-Villa
2112:Returned Masterworks
2053:Returned Masterworks
1963:Goudz, Inna (2020).
1265:Ferdinand Sauerbruch
1099:1928 Summer Olympics
817:The secession crisis
733:Hamburger Kunsthalle
640:Shoemaker's Workshop
635:Shoemaker's Workshop
393:Die Gänserupferinnen
384:Women Plucking Geese
342:University of Berlin
3344:Philip Wilson Steer
3196:William Blair Bruce
2983:Gustave Caillebotte
2903:Gustave Caillebotte
2137:Leo Baeck Institute
1496:The Artist's Studio
1257:Konrad von Kardorff
1196:National Socialists
1120:Paul von Hindenburg
1111:Paul von Hindenburg
996:Heinrich von Kleist
963:Julius Meier-Graefe
485:Dutch Sewing School
373:Mihály von Munkácsy
193:Paul von Hindenburg
3786:Hildebrand Gurlitt
3781:Gurlitt Collection
3605:Ludwig Godenschweg
3590:Conrad FelixmĂĽller
3453:The Impressionists
3421:Post-Impressionism
3299:Konstantin Korovin
3149:Frederick McCubbin
2993:Henry O. Havemeyer
2408:chicagotribune.com
2312:than 10 years ago.
1577:The New York Times
1346:In 2005/2006, the
1324:Hildebrand Gurlitt
1285:Adolph Goldschmidt
1277:Max J. Friedländer
1134:, photographed by
1116:
915:
830:
686:
608:
580:
545:
483:. In his picture,
389:
325:Ferdinand Lassalle
236:
65:Kingdom of Prussia
3832:People from Mitte
3804:
3803:
3791:Cornelius Gurlitt
3745:Rudolf Schlichter
3670:Wilhelm Lehmbruck
3635:Wassily Kandinsky
3478:
3477:
3411:Neo-Impressionism
3279:Antoine Guillemet
3259:Marie Bracquemond
3226:Laura Muntz Lyall
3092:Theodore Robinson
3087:Lilla Cabot Perry
2923:Armand Guillaumin
2843:
2842:
2790:Martha Liebermann
2575:Project Gutenberg
2554:Los Angeles Times
2299:www.lootedart.com
2274:www.lootedart.com
2249:www.lootedart.com
2194:www.lootedart.com
2027:978-3-642-94011-8
1941:978-3-8471-0977-8
1705:978-3-96456-435-1
1623:Los Angeles Times
1570:(20 March 2006).
1311:Lost Art database
1130:and the Dutchman
616:Schusterwerkstatt
518:Franz von Lenbach
510:Vittore Carpaccio
350:Ferdinand Pauwels
159:
158:
140:Martha Liebermann
3914:
3730:Christian Rohlfs
3505:
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3455:(2006 TV series)
3447:Wilfrid de Glehn
3319:Nadežda Petrović
3284:Nazmi Ziya GĂĽran
3183:
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3077:Alphonse Maureau
3054:
3024:Ambroise Vollard
3014:Paul Durand-Ruel
2970:
2948:Camille Pissarro
2893:Frédéric Bazille
2879:
2870:
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2856:
2847:
2846:
2825:Berlin Secession
2796:Felix Liebermann
2774:Liebermann Villa
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2584:Internet Archive
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1534:Otto Gerstenberg
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1200:Brandenburg Gate
1180:
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1154:Nazi persecution
1140:Nicola Perscheid
1060:Walther Rathenau
1008:Walther Rathenau
976:Anton von Werner
851:Walter Leistikow
834:Berlin Secession
811:Woman with Goats
807:Woman with Goats
764:Kaiser Wilhelm I
706:Anton von Werner
673:Return to Berlin
663:Vincent van Gogh
565:Richard Muther's
311:
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281:Felix Liebermann
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240:Josef Liebermann
208:Berlin Secession
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3755:Lothar Schreyer
3740:Oskar Schlemmer
3705:Wilhelm Morgner
3665:Wilhelm Lachnit
3650:Oskar Kokoschka
3595:Otto Freundlich
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3314:Francisco Oller
3304:MartĂn Malharro
3249:Eugène Baudouin
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3139:E. Phillips Fox
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2139:. 28 March 2017
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1294:Nazi-looted art
1281:Friedrich Sarre
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1170:
1167:
1156:
1095:art competition
1053:Weimar Republic
1021:
990:'s novella and
931:
819:
792:Wilhelm TrĂĽbner
729:Theodor Mommsen
675:
659:Bleaching Field
648:Ernest Hoschedé
597:
514:Gentile Bellini
506:
446:Barbizon School
417:
361:Franco-Prussian
333:
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303:Antonie Volkmar
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255:Carl Liebermann
242:
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189:Albert Einstein
89:
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75:8 February 1935
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3700:Jean Metzinger
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3675:Max Liebermann
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3655:Käthe Kollwitz
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3294:Max Liebermann
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3289:Dominique Lang
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3254:Olga Boznańska
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2640:, ed. (1911).
2638:Chisholm, Hugh
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2447:plone.unige.ch
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1038:Heinrich Zille
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886:, followed by
872:Georges Braque
856:Expressionists
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741:Ludwig Pietsch
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3698:
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3693:
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3686:
3683:
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3678:
3676:
3673:
3671:
3668:
3666:
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3613:
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3608:
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3603:
3601:
3598:
3596:
3593:
3591:
3588:
3586:
3583:
3581:
3578:
3576:
3575:Lovis Corinth
3573:
3571:
3568:
3566:
3563:
3561:
3560:Ernst Barlach
3558:
3556:
3553:
3551:
3548:
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3532:
3529:
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3422:
3419:
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3414:
3412:
3409:
3407:
3404:
3402:
3399:
3397:
3396:Boston School
3394:
3392:
3389:
3388:
3386:
3382:
3376:
3373:
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3368:
3366:
3363:
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3327:
3325:
3322:
3320:
3317:
3315:
3312:
3310:
3307:
3305:
3302:
3300:
3297:
3295:
3292:
3290:
3287:
3285:
3282:
3280:
3277:
3275:
3272:
3270:
3269:Lovis Corinth
3267:
3265:
3262:
3260:
3257:
3255:
3252:
3250:
3247:
3246:
3244:
3238:
3232:
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3224:
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3217:
3214:
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3209:
3207:
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3176:
3170:
3167:
3165:
3162:
3160:
3157:
3155:
3152:
3150:
3147:
3145:
3144:Elioth Gruner
3142:
3140:
3137:
3135:
3132:
3131:
3129:
3127:
3119:
3113:
3112:J. Alden Weir
3110:
3108:
3107:Robert Vonnoh
3105:
3103:
3100:
3098:
3095:
3093:
3090:
3088:
3085:
3083:
3080:
3078:
3075:
3073:
3072:Childe Hassam
3070:
3068:
3065:
3063:
3060:
3059:
3057:
3055:
3047:
3041:
3038:
3037:
3035:
3031:
3025:
3022:
3020:
3019:Georges Petit
3017:
3015:
3012:
3011:
3009:
3005:
2999:
2996:
2994:
2991:
2989:
2986:
2984:
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2974:
2969:
2959:
2958:Alfred Sisley
2956:
2954:
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2949:
2946:
2944:
2941:
2939:
2936:
2934:
2933:Édouard Manet
2931:
2929:
2926:
2924:
2921:
2919:
2916:
2914:
2911:
2909:
2906:
2904:
2901:
2899:
2898:Eugène Boudin
2896:
2894:
2891:
2890:
2888:
2884:
2880:
2878:Impressionism
2871:
2866:
2864:
2859:
2857:
2852:
2851:
2848:
2836:
2833:
2831:
2830:Impressionism
2828:
2826:
2823:
2822:
2820:
2816:
2809:
2808:Emil Rathenau
2806:
2803:
2800:
2797:
2794:
2791:
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2546:
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2533:
2528:
2526:
2518:
2512:
2504:
2498:
2491:
2478:
2475:(in French).
2474:
2470:
2463:
2448:
2444:
2438:
2430:
2424:
2409:
2405:
2398:
2383:. 15 May 2015
2382:
2378:
2372:
2357:. 27 May 2015
2356:
2352:
2346:
2331:. 22 May 2015
2330:
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2313:
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2215:
2199:
2195:
2191:
2185:
2169:
2165:
2158:
2151:
2138:
2134:
2128:
2113:
2109:
2103:
2101:
2091:
2089:
2081:
2077:
2072:
2065:
2054:
2050:
2043:
2029:
2023:
2019:
2015:
2011:
2010:
2002:
1995:
1990:
1982:
1978:
1974:
1970:
1966:
1959:
1951:
1947:
1943:
1937:
1933:
1929:
1925:
1924:
1915:
1907:
1901:
1893:
1886:
1878:
1872:
1868:
1861:
1853:
1846:
1838:
1831:
1822:
1820:
1818:
1816:
1814:
1812:
1810:
1801:
1799:9781138563230
1795:
1791:
1784:
1782:
1780:
1778:
1776:
1774:
1772:
1764:
1763:3-428-00195-8
1760:
1756:
1748:
1742:
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1728:
1726:
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1707:
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1697:
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1612:
1610:
1608:
1606:
1604:
1602:
1600:
1583:
1579:
1578:
1573:
1569:
1568:Glueck, Grace
1563:
1561:
1559:
1557:
1555:
1553:
1548:
1536:
1535:
1527:
1522:
1518:
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1513:
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1497:
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1476:
1471:
1467:
1466:
1459:
1454:
1450:
1444:
1439:
1435:
1429:
1424:
1420:
1419:
1412:
1407:
1403:
1402:
1395:
1390:
1389:
1383:
1381:
1376:
1375:Israel Museum
1373:In 2011, the
1371:
1369:
1365:
1360:
1355:
1353:
1352:Jewish Museum
1349:
1342:Commemoration
1339:
1337:
1333:
1331:
1330:
1325:
1320:
1317:
1314:
1312:
1307:
1305:
1301:
1291:
1288:
1286:
1282:
1278:
1274:
1270:
1266:
1262:
1258:
1254:
1253:Hans Purrmann
1248:
1246:
1236:
1232:
1229:
1225:
1222:
1220:
1219:Erich Kästner
1216:
1215:Heinrich Mann
1212:
1207:
1205:
1201:
1197:
1186:
1179:
1165:
1151:
1147:
1145:
1144:Fritz Klimsch
1141:
1137:
1133:
1129:
1124:
1121:
1113:
1112:
1106:
1102:
1100:
1096:
1092:
1087:
1083:
1081:
1077:
1071:
1069:
1065:
1061:
1056:
1054:
1049:
1047:
1043:
1039:
1035:
1031:
1030:Max Pechstein
1025:
1016:
1012:
1009:
1003:
1001:
997:
994:, as well as
993:
989:
985:
979:
977:
972:
967:
964:
960:
956:
951:
947:
945:
941:
940:Paul Cassirer
937:
926:
922:
920:
912:
908:
904:
902:
901:Lovis Corinth
898:
893:
889:
888:Max Pechstein
885:
884:Georg Tappert
880:
877:
873:
869:
868:Henri Matisse
865:
864:Pablo Picasso
861:
857:
852:
848:
844:
840:
839:Lovis Corinth
835:
827:
823:
814:
812:
808:
804:
799:
797:
793:
788:
786:
780:
778:
773:
769:
768:Friedrich III
765:
760:
758:
757:Adolph Menzel
752:
749:
744:
742:
736:
734:
730:
726:
725:Georg Brandes
722:
721:Adolph Menzel
718:
714:
709:
707:
702:
700:
696:
690:
683:
679:
670:
668:
664:
660:
655:
653:
652:Édouard Manet
649:
645:
641:
636:
631:
629:
623:
621:
617:
613:
605:
601:
592:
591:was created.
590:
586:
577:
573:
569:
566:
562:
561:Wilhelm Leibl
558:
553:
552:
542:
541:
536:
532:
530:
525:
523:
522:Munich School
519:
515:
511:
501:
498:
492:
490:
486:
482:
478:
477:Jozef Israëls
474:
473:William Unger
469:
467:
463:
458:
456:
452:
447:
443:
442:
436:
434:
430:
426:
422:
412:
410:
404:
402:
398:
394:
386:
385:
380:
376:
374:
369:
366:
362:
357:
355:
351:
347:
343:
339:
328:
326:
322:
317:
313:
309:
304:
299:
297:
293:
292:Pariser Platz
287:
284:
282:
276:
271:
265:
260:
256:
252:
251:Emil Rathenau
246:
241:
234:
229:
215:
211:
209:
205:
201:
196:
194:
190:
186:
182:
178:
174:
169:
167:
166:Impressionism
163:
154:
149:
144:
141:
138:
134:
131:
128:
124:
121:Impressionism
120:
116:
112:
108:
104:
100:
96:
92:
88:
84:
74:
70:
66:
62:
49:
45:
40:
34:
29:
22:
19:
3735:Egon Schiele
3710:Otto Mueller
3685:August Macke
3674:
3660:Alfred Kubin
3620:Erich Heckel
3615:George Grosz
3610:Otto Griebel
3570:Marc Chagall
3565:Max Beckmann
3555:Jankel Adler
3452:
3293:
3274:Eva Gonzalès
3159:John Russell
2938:Claude Monet
2913:Paul CĂ©zanne
2908:Mary Cassatt
2754:
2746:
2738:
2730:
2722:
2714:
2700:
2647:
2614:
2552:
2545:
2534:
2511:
2488:
2481:. Retrieved
2472:
2462:
2450:. Retrieved
2446:
2437:
2411:. Retrieved
2407:
2397:
2385:. Retrieved
2380:
2371:
2359:. Retrieved
2355:the Guardian
2354:
2345:
2333:. Retrieved
2328:
2319:
2310:
2303:. Retrieved
2298:
2289:
2277:. Retrieved
2273:
2264:
2252:. Retrieved
2248:
2239:
2227:. Retrieved
2223:
2214:
2202:. Retrieved
2193:
2184:
2172:. Retrieved
2167:
2157:
2148:
2141:. Retrieved
2136:
2127:
2115:. Retrieved
2111:
2079:
2071:
2063:
2056:. Retrieved
2052:
2042:
2031:, retrieved
2008:
2001:
1989:
1964:
1958:
1922:
1914:
1891:
1885:
1866:
1860:
1851:
1845:
1836:
1830:
1789:
1754:
1709:, retrieved
1687:
1678:
1666:. Retrieved
1662:
1632:. Retrieved
1621:
1586:. Retrieved
1575:
1532:Portrait of
1531:
1510:
1495:
1480:
1463:
1448:
1434:Boys Bathing
1433:
1416:
1399:
1380:World War II
1372:
1368:stolperstein
1356:
1345:
1334:
1327:
1321:
1318:
1315:
1308:
1297:
1289:
1249:
1242:
1233:
1230:
1226:
1223:
1208:
1203:
1193:
1185:stolperstein
1148:
1125:
1117:
1108:
1088:
1084:
1079:
1075:
1072:
1057:
1050:
1026:
1022:
1019:Weimar years
1013:
1004:
999:
991:
983:
980:
968:
955:Wilhelm Solf
952:
948:
935:
932:
923:
916:
910:
897:Max Beckmann
881:
843:Ernst Oppler
831:
825:
810:
806:
800:
789:
784:
781:
777:Hohenzollern
761:
753:
747:
745:
737:
710:
703:
691:
687:
681:
658:
656:
643:
639:
634:
632:
627:
624:
615:
609:
603:
588:
581:
575:
549:
546:
538:
528:
526:
507:
493:
484:
481:Hague School
470:
459:
454:
450:
441:en plein air
439:
437:
418:
405:
396:
392:
390:
382:
370:
358:
334:
318:
314:
300:
288:
285:
237:
212:
197:
170:
161:
160:
77:(1935-02-08)
57:20 July 1847
18:
3822:1935 deaths
3817:1847 births
3550:Jussuf Abbo
3460:Louis Leroy
3358:Other media
3334:Max Slevogt
3309:Henry Moret
3154:Tom Roberts
3033:Exhibitions
2918:Edgar Degas
2886:Originators
2735:(1882–1883)
2539:(in German)
2381:artnet News
2329:artnet News
1854:(1): 29–36.
1852:Das MĂĽnster
1792:. Ashgate.
1751:(in German)
1634:28 November
1273:Georg Kolbe
1245:Arno Breker
1128:Anders Zorn
1068:Hugo Preuss
1051:During the
929:World War I
847:Max Slevogt
717:Max Klinger
713:Edgar Degas
699:Anton Mauve
595:Netherlands
585:Paris Salon
497:Paris Salon
427:, near the
409:Hans Makart
365:Johannitern
306: [
273: [
262: [
243: [
204:avant-garde
181:bourgeoisie
94:Nationality
3811:Categories
3715:Emil Nolde
3690:Franz Marc
3625:Karl Hofer
3370:Literature
3191:Henri Beau
3123:Australian
2490:Silberberg
2452:6 February
2413:6 February
2387:6 February
2361:6 February
2335:6 February
2305:6 February
2279:6 February
2254:6 February
2229:6 February
2204:6 February
2174:1 February
2168:Beobachter
2143:8 February
2033:5 December
1876:3487098970
1711:5 December
1684:"Nachwort"
1543:References
1261:Otto Nagel
1034:Karl Hofer
913:, ca. 1920
892:Die BrĂĽcke
860:Emil Nolde
466:Frans Hals
421:Montmartre
53:1847-07-20
3645:Paul Klee
3585:Max Ernst
2798:(brother)
2708:Paintings
1981:242399554
1950:240824773
1900:cite book
1663:Olympedia
1058:In 1922,
984:Kriegzeit
971:Wiesbaden
785:La France
772:Bad Kösen
626:composed
606:, 1881–82
462:Zandvoort
354:Rembrandt
218:Biography
146:Signature
102:Education
3580:Otto Dix
3384:See also
3180:Canadian
3051:American
2810:(cousin)
2804:(cousin)
2593:LibriVox
2497:cite web
2483:21 March
2477:Archived
2423:cite web
2198:Archived
2117:19 March
2058:19 March
1628:Archived
1588:28 March
1582:Archived
1132:Jan Veth
1042:Otto Dix
874:and the
479:and the
433:Daubigny
425:Barbizon
321:Bismarck
126:Movement
3764:Related
3543:Artists
3440:Related
3431:The Ten
3242:artists
3182:artists
3125:artists
3053:artists
3007:Dealers
2976:Patrons
2835:Realism
2818:Related
2767:Museums
2663:of the
2659:in the
2629:at the
2608:Ben Uri
2606:at the
2582:at the
1668:26 July
1537:, 1919
1516:Delilah
1386:Gallery
1097:at the
1093:in the
919:Wannsee
803:Katwijk
667:Silesia
359:In the
185:Wannsee
87:Germany
2792:(wife)
2783:Family
2759:(1901)
2751:(1899)
2743:(1894)
2727:(1879)
2719:(1872)
2024:
1979:
1948:
1938:
1873:
1796:
1761:
1702:
1519:, 1902
1512:Samson
1498:, 1902
1483:, 1902
1468:, 1901
1451:, 1900
1436:, 1898
1421:, 1894
1404:, 1892
1114:, 1927
1076:Trench
988:Goethe
876:Fauves
828:, 1916
684:, 1897
620:Renoir
612:Dongen
543:, 1879
504:Munich
489:Jewish
387:(1872)
346:Weimar
177:Munich
173:Weimar
136:Spouse
97:German
83:Berlin
61:Berlin
41:(1904)
3465:Nadar
3365:Music
3240:Other
2150:life.
1977:S2CID
1946:S2CID
1239:Death
695:Laren
310:]
277:]
266:]
247:]
223:Youth
118:Style
2610:site
2503:link
2485:2021
2454:2021
2429:link
2415:2021
2389:2021
2363:2021
2337:2021
2307:2021
2281:2021
2256:2021
2231:2021
2206:2021
2176:2022
2145:2021
2119:2021
2060:2021
2035:2020
2022:ISBN
1936:ISBN
1906:link
1871:ISBN
1794:ISBN
1759:ISBN
1713:2020
1700:ISBN
1670:2020
1636:2021
1590:2017
1514:and
1283:and
1183:The
1044:and
845:and
794:and
642:and
512:and
191:and
72:Died
47:Born
2665:ZBW
2591:at
2573:at
2014:doi
1969:doi
1928:doi
1692:doi
1217:or
1136:Yva
998:'s
3813::
2646:.
2524:^
2499:}}
2495:{{
2487:.
2471:.
2445:.
2425:}}
2421:{{
2406:.
2379:.
2353:.
2327:.
2309:.
2297:.
2272:.
2247:.
2222:.
2192:.
2166:.
2147:.
2135:.
2110:.
2099:^
2087:^
2078::
2062:.
2051:.
2020:,
1975:.
1944:.
1934:.
1902:}}
1898:{{
1808:^
1770:^
1753:.
1749:"
1720:^
1698:,
1686:,
1661:.
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