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August Macke

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August Macke and artworks

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August Macke

Walter Cohen

Authors:

August Macke & Walter Cohen

© 2013, Confidential Concepts, Worldwide, USA

© 2013, Parkstone Press USA, New York

© Image-Barwww.image-bar.com

ISBN: 978-1-78310-154-2

All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or adapted without the permission of the copyright holder, throughout the world.

Unless otherwise specified, copyright on the works reproduced lies with the respective photographers. Despite intensive research, it has not always been possible to establish copyright ownership. Where this is the case, we would appreciate notification.

Contents

Biography

Preface

Macke on “The New Program” [1914]

The Masksby August Macke

Macke’s Letters to Franz Marc

Bonn, after 9 December 1910

Bonn, the 2ndday of Christmas, 1910

Bonn, postmarked 24 March 1911

Bonn, postmarked 15 June 1911

Bonn, 1 September 1911

Bonn, before Christmas 1911

Bonn, 8 January 1912

Bonn, 22 January 1912

Bonn, after 23 January 1912

Bonn, 5 February 1912

Bonn, 28 April 1912

Bonn, 14 May 1912

Letter from Bonn [postmarked: 25 May 1912]

Bonn, postmarked 5 June 1912

Bonn, 1 July 1912

Bonn, 23 July 1912

Bonn, 19 May 1913

Lisbeth to Mary Macke Marc, 11 November 1913

Index

In the joy of a sunny day, invisible ideas materialise quietly.

— August Macke

Self-Portrait with a Hat, 1909.

Oil on wood, 41 x 32.5 cm. Kunstmuseum Bonn, Bonn.

Biography

3 January 1887:August Robert Ludwig Macke was born the third child and first son of the art-loving civil engineer and contractor August Friedrich Macke (1845-1904) and Mary Florentine Macke (1848-1922) in Meschede, Sauerland.

1887:The Macke family relocated to Cologne.

1897-1900:Augustattended the Cologne gymnasium.

1900:He moved to Bonn, where he attended secondary school. His artistic talent and his extraordinary artistic interest were significantly pronounced at an earlyage, even from his school days.

1903:Macke met his future wife Elisabeth Gerhardt, the daughter of the Bonn manufacturer Carl Gerhardt. With over 200 portraits, he madeher his most significant model.

1904:Against the wishes of his parents, he left school a year early to pursue an education at the Royal Academy of Art in Düsseldorf. Criticising the curriculum, which mainly consisted of copying existing artworks, the 18-year-old left the academy in November 1906. Incidentally, Macke attended various courses at the Düsseldorf School of Applied Arts.

1905:First tripto Italy with Walter Gerhardt.

1906:He designed stage decorations and costumes for the Düsseldorf city theatre under the direction of Louise Dumont and Gustav Lindemann.With the poets Willy Schmidtbonn and Herbert Eulenberg, along with sculptor Claus Cito, he undertook a journey along the Rhine to Holland and Belgium followed by a short stay in London.

October 1907:On a trip to Paris, the works of French Impressionism made such an impact on him that he attended classes of German Impressionist Lovis Corinth (1858-1925) at theAcademy of Fine Art in Berlin.

1908:After a trip to Italy, Macke, at the request of Bernhard Koehler and Elisabeth Gerhardt, accompanied them to Paris as a consultant to complement Koehler’s collection withworks of French Impressionism.

1908-1909:One-year military service, which he completed in October 1908, left him no time for art.

1909:On the 5thof October, Macke married Elisabeth Gerhardtafter a six year relationship.Journeyed via Frankfurt, Strasbourg, Basel, and Bern to Paris, where Macke met Carl Hofer.At the invitation of the Schmidtbonns, the couple moved to the Tegernsee lake at the end of October.

1910:At the beginning of the year, Macke met Franz Marc (1880-1916).In September, Macke visited an exhibition of the New Artists’ Association in Munich including works of the Fauves and early Cubist paintings.At the end of 1910, the family moved back to Bonn. Here, in his new studio, Macke wouldcreate more than 330 paintings.The couple’s first son, Walter Macke, was born.

1911:Macke played an active part in drawing up theBlue Rider(Der Blaue Reiter)almanac, published by Wassily Kandinsky and Franz Marc, and to which he contributed his “masks”.In the first exhibition of theBlue Rider, which took place from December 1911 to January 1912 in the Modern Gallery Heinrich Thannhauser in Munich, Macke displayed three works, includingThe StormandIndians on Horseback(both 1911).

1912:Macke took part in the secondBlue Riderexhibition, initiated by Kandinsky and Marc under the titleBlack & Whitein Munich’s book and art dealer Hans Goltz. However, he increasingly artistically dissociated himself from the group.That same year, he was a member of the Working Committee for the Special League Exhibition (Sonderbund-Ausstellung) in Cologne and also participated in other important exhibitions in Moscow, at the Cologne Secession, at the Museum of Decorative Arts, at the Thannhauser Gallery in Munich, and at the Jena Kunstverein, etc. This was followed by a journey to Paris with Marc and the formation of an acquaintancewith Delaunay and Apollinaire.

1913:Wolfgang, the Mackes’ second son, was born. Along with other artists, Macke participated in the exhibitionRheinischer Expressionisten(Rhenish Expressionists) in Bonn which he organised with Franz Marc. He took part in the organisation of the First German Autumn Salon in Berlin in 1913.In autumn, the family moved out to Hilterfingen on Lake Thun where many of the most important worksin his repertoire were created.

April 1914:Together with Paul Klee and Louis Moilliet, Macke travelled on a two-week journey to Tunisia. The photos, drawings, and watercolours which he created there, served as a form of artistic inspirationfor him long after his return.

June 1914: The Mackes returned to Bonn.

August 1914:After the outbreak of World War II, Macke volunteered to serve in the German army. On the 8thAugust he was admitted as an infantryman in the Prussian army.

26thSeptember 1914:August Macke died in action; a warrant officer of the 5thCompany by Perthes-lès-Hurlus in Champagne. He left behind around 6,000 drawings in his sketchbooks andaround 3,000 individual sheets.

Preface

August Macke (1887-1914) was born in Meschede in the Sauerland region and is of Westphalian origin. However, as he moved into the Rhineland very early and spent most of his short life on the Rhine, he has always been described as a typical Rhinelander.

When the Cologne Art Association opened the near-historical exhibition ‘The Young Rhineland’ at the beginning of 1918, the heart of the event was the first retrospective exhibition for August Macke, who died in the second month of the war. “Young Rhineland” represents Macke in a purer sense than the well-known artist association that was founded later in Düsseldorf. Anyone who dismisses Macke’s art with the term “decorative” fails to understand that the young Rhenish artist’s paintings signify everything that defines character and strength.

This art is largely attributable to its optical appearance which is closely interlinked to the indescribable joy and richness of colour of the Rhenish landscape. Earlier Düsseldorf artists were also attempting to reproduce these same landscapes, but the majority of these productions, with the exception of the German illustrator and painter Caspar Scheuren (1810-1887), appear extremely pale and unreal.

Macke also focussed on the appearance of objects, and did not always avoid veduta-like productions. You may look in vain for the healthy Rhenish sensuality in the later productions of the Romanticism on the Rhine, even where it remains totally terrestrial.

The Old Violonist, 1906.

Oil on canvas, 65.6 x 46 cm. Private collection

Fisherman on the Rhine, 1907

Oil on cardboard, 40.3 x 44.5 cm. Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich

Carnations in Green Vase, 1907

Oil on cardboard, 34 x 22.5 cm. Private collection

Whilst Macke looked for the soul of things, the appearance of his works was not unfaithful, as substantiated by his workThe Rhenish Landscape with Factory(1913). The subject for this painting was literally on his way when leaving the northern parts of Bonn where his home was located, in order to walk to the Rhine. And there, encamped behind the seven mountains, was the factory; for most people a frustrating contrast, but the painter counted it a blessing and much more than just a “theme”.

The then 26-year-old artist, with the resources of early Expressionism and his own range of colours, so rarely seen amongst the palettes of professional landscape artists, had created the unity of nature and audaciously integrated work of man. The remarkable sureness of his design, which shows up in this small picture, can already be found in his very early works, such as theNaked Girl with a Headscarf(1910).

Macke spent a short time at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. However, he owes more to Paris, which he frequently visited. Of the younger artists in Paris, Robert Delaunay (1885-1941) was closest to the Rhinelander. More important was his friendship with Franz Marc (1880-1916), which was forged in 1909 in Tegernsee, where the newlywed had spent some time with his young, and rarely sympathetic, wife. In the first volume containing his letters, recordings, and Marc’s aphorisms, published in 1920, Macke dedicated ten of the most beautiful aspects of his friendship with Macke, including an obituary from the battlefield of 25thOctober 1914. I hope this will finally put an end to the legend that Macke was only on the receiving end in this friendship. For me, there never was the slightest doubt that the younger artist was superior in originality of his pure artistic talent to the somewhat doctrinal painter of the “BlueHorses“. In Bavaria, Kandinsky (1866-1944) entered into a friendly relationship with Macke; the artists associated with theBlue Rider