Erich Heckel:
Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)
Proportional view
Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)
Erich Heckel:
Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)

Quick info

unique piece | signed | dated | titled | gouache and chalk on handmade paper | framed | size 81 x 93.5 cm

Collector's tip
Product no. IN-936780.R1
Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)
Erich Heckel: Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)

Detailed description

Picture "Southern French Landscape" (1929)

Towards the end of the 1920s, Erich Heckel undertook numerous journeys that repeatedly took him to France. In the process, he expanded his artistic oeuvre to include pure landscape portraits. Figurative depictions, on the other hand, which characterised his early work, became a secondary matter from then on.

This delicate gouache belongs to his landscape paintings and differs from his Expressionist work. Through the perspective Heckel chose and his unusual point of view, he unites the radiant panorama-like landscape with the lively dynamism of the horse-drawn carriage winding through the serpentines.

Gouache and chalk on handmade paper, 1929. Signed, dated and titled. Motif size/sheet size 56 x 69.6 cm. Size in frame 81 x 93.5 cm as shown.

About Erich Heckel

Erich Heckel (1883-1970) is one of the most important artists of German Expressionism. In 1905, together with Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, Karl Schmidt-Rottluff and Fritz Bleyl, he founded the legendary artists' group "Die Brücke" in Dresden, which later Max Pechstein, Emil Nolde and Otto Mueller joined.

After World War I Heckel developed a new, cosmopolitan classicism that was accompanied by a more naturalistic approach and a brightening of the palette. In the 1920s, he produced numerous landscape works, including the unusually large charcoal drawing of the 'Westerholz Mill', which is still a popular touristic destination in Schleswig-Holstein.

Erich Heckel's works are represented in the world's leading museums and collections.

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