Ferdinand Hodler
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About the Book
Swiss painter Ferdinand Hodler is one of Europe's best least-known artists. Though he remained in Switzerland for his entire life, his international reputation has been growing in the past several decades, beginning with a traveling retrospective in the early 1970s. Hodler, who kept up on the latest movements brewing in Paris, is considered a Symbolist who tempered that movement's flights of fancy with Realism. He is regarded as a bridge between the Modern period and the impulses of mid-1800s Realism, Symbolism and Art Nouveau. As may be expected with such a range of influences at his disposal, Hodler's style fluctuated widely throughout his career. His most well known painting may be "The Woodcutter" (1908), which was commissioned as an illustration for the Swiss 50 franc note. "The Woodcutter" is a strange and engaging mixture of Expressionism--the subject is depicted mid-chop in vigorous brush strokes--and Symbolism, as the ghostly landscape behind the figure supports an odd, bright blue, orb-like cloud. More than two dedades since his last retrospective, this fresh and extensive assessment of Hodler's paintings finds much new territory to uncover.
Book Details
ISBN-13: 9783775720632
EAN: 9783775720632
Binding: Hardback
Gardner Classification Code: A01
Illustrations: 360 colour illustrations, 40 b&w illustrations
No of Pages: 400
PrintOnDemand: N
Spine Width: 41 mm
Year Of Publication: 2008
ISBN-10: 3775720634
Publisher: Hatje Cantz
Country Of Origin: Germany
Height: 254 mm
MediaMail: Y
Pagination: 400 pages, 360 colour illustrations, 40 b&w illustrations
Returnable: Y
Width: 295 mm