Distorted Norms: German Expressionist Prints and the Legacy of the Early German Masters

File(s)
Date
2019-05-01Author
SHIN, YOUNGCHUL
Department
Art History
Advisor(s)
Sarah Schaefer
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
German Expressionism, one of the most influential art movements of the twentieth century, was the source of unprecedented experiments in printmaking. Although the works appear modern to our eyes, Expressionist printmakers drew heavily from the early history of printmaking, which emerged in northern Europe in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The early history of the print included the development of the woodcut, the innovation of the printing press, and the invention of new printmaking techniques such as engraving and drypoint. The ways in which German Expressionists drew upon their heritage in printmaking is evident in three key ways: the revival of the woodcut, the distortion of the human figure, and social observation. Because German Expressionism embraced various styles and numerous artists, it has been challenging to clearly demonstrate how they looked back into the early German printmaking masters. However, the exhibition and catalogue for Distorted Norms: German Expressionist Prints and the Legacy of the Early German Masters reveals the visual connections between the two eras of printmaking and draws on two major strengths of UWM Art Collections.
Subject
Distorted Norms
Early German Prints
Exhibition Catalogue
German Expressionism
German Expressionist Prints
Thesis Exhibition
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/92175Type
thesis
Related items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Subtle Loyalty: German and German-Americans in Wisconsin During the First World War
Zenda, Benjamin (2010-05-20)This paper discusses the social climate in Wisconsin during the First World War. Many of Wisconsin's residents had been born in Germany, but then were naturalized as United States citizens. Most of these German-Americans ... -
Music as Political Power in Postwar Germany: The Fight for German Reunification through the Voices of East and West German Musicians
Meldrum, Monica (Office of Student Research and Creative Activity, 2018-12)When the Second World War ended, Germany embarked on a period of heightened reconstruction. Along with the restoration of bombed buildings and the reestablishment of political systems, the postwar era was a time of rich ... -
A Tale of Two Migrations : the Dependence of the Volga German Refugees of 1917-1923 on the Earlier Volga German Migrations of 1871-1914
Justmann, Lydia (2009-07-20)This paper focuses on the Volga German migrations to the United States, and the degree to which the migration of 1917 to 1923 was dependent upon earlier migrations beginning in 1871. The catalyst for the first major Volga ...
