The Fisherman
Artist
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner
(German, 1880 - 1938)
Date1923
MediumColor woodcut
DimensionsImage: 13 1/2 × 17 3/8 inches (34.29 × 44.13 cm)
Mat: 21 × 26 1/2 inches (53.34 × 67.31 cm)
Mat: 21 × 26 1/2 inches (53.34 × 67.31 cm)
Credit LineGift of Jane Wade in memory of Curt Valentin
Object number55-73/7
Signed(pencil, b.m.):"Handdruck E. L. Kirchner" (verso): estate stamp
On View
Not on viewCollections
Gallery LabelA solitary man with feet planted upon dark rocks stands amid the rushing waters of a stream in this color woodcut by German Expressionist artist Ernst Ludwig Kirchner. Alone with his thoughts, the man angles for fish. During pre-World War I years, Kirchner and fellow members of the Dresden/Berlin-based artist group, Die Brücke (The Bridge), sought a similar reconnection with nature by spending their summers camping at nearby lakes and on the North Sea island of Fehmarn. While serving in the German army during the war, Kirchner suffered a nervous breakdown. He was discharged and moved to neutral Switzerland, where he sought solace in the restorative mountains near Davos.
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