Ernst Barlach
Ernst Barlach (2 January 1870, Wedel – 24 October 1938, Rostock) was a German expressionist sculptor, printmaker and writer. Although he was a supporter of the war in the years leading to World War I, his participation in the war made him change his position, and he is mostly known for his sculptures protesting against the war. This created many conflicts during the rise of the Nazi Party, when most of his works were confiscated as degenerate art.
Contents
Biography
Youth
Barlach was born in Wedel, Holstein as the oldest of the four sons of Johanna Luise Barlach and Dr Georg Barlach. He attended primary school in Ratzeburg. It was during this period that his father died, early in 1884. He came from a Lutheran home.[1]
Study years
Barlach studied from 1888 to 1891 at the Gewerbeschule Hamburg. Due to his artistic talent, he continued his studies at the Königliche Akademie der bildenden Künste zu Dresden (Royal Art School Dresden) as a student of Robert Diez between 1891 and 1895. He created his first major sculpture during this time, Die Krautpflückerin (The Herb Plucker). He continued his studies for one more year in Paris at the Académie Julian, but remained critical of the German tendency to copy the style of French artists. Nevertheless, he returned to Paris again for a few months in 1897 to undertake further studies.
Seeking

After his studies, Barlach worked for some time as a sculptor in Hamburg and Altona, working mainly in an Art Nouveau style. He produced illustrations for the Art Nouveau magazine Jugend 1897–1902, and made sculpture in a style close to Art Nouveau, including some ceramic statues. Afterwards, he also worked as a teacher at a school for ceramics. His first solo exhibition took place at the Kunstsalon Richard Mutz, Berlin, in 1904.
Formative years

However, the lack of commercial success of his works depressed Barlach. To lighten up, he decided to travel for eight weeks together with his brother Nikolaus and to visit his brother Hans in Russia. This trip to Russia in 1906 was one of the greatest influences on him and his artistic style. Also during his travels in Russia his son Nikolaus was born on 20 August 1906, starting a two-year fight with the mother, Rosa Schwab, for the custody of the child, which Barlach was finally granted.
After returning from Russia, Barlach's financial situation improved considerably, as he received a fixed salary from the art dealer Paul Cassirer in exchange for his sculptures. The formative experiences in Russia and the financial security helped him to develop his own style, focusing on the faces and hands of the people in his sculptures and reducing the other parts of the figures to a minimum. He also began to make wood carvings and bronzes of figures swathed in heavy drapery like those in early Gothic art, and in dramatic attitudes expressive of powerful emotions and a yearning for spiritual ecstasy. He also worked for the German journal Simplicissimus, and started to produce some literature. His works were shown on various exhibitions. He also spent ten months in Florence, Italy in 1909 and afterwards settled in 1910 in Güstrow in Mecklenburg, where he spent the rest of his life.
In the years before World War I, Barlach was a patriotic and enthusiastic supporter of the war, awaiting a new artistic age from the war. This support for the war can also be seen in his works, as for example the statue Der Rächer (The Avenger), from December 1914. His awaited new artistic age came for him when he volunteered to join the war between 1915 and 1916 as an infantry soldier. After three months of service he was discharged due to a heart ailment,[2] returning as a pacifist and a staunch opponent of war. The horror of the war influenced all of his subsequent works.
Popularity
Barlach's fame increased after the war, and he received many awards and became a member in the prestigious Preußische Akademie der Künste (Prussian Art Academy) in 1919 and the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München (Munich Art Academy) in 1925. Barlach rejected a number of honorary degrees and teaching positions. In 1925 he also met Bernhard and Marga Böhmer for the first time. He received the Kleist Prize for drama in 1924 for his Die Sündflut (The Flood), in which he projects his personal mysticism onto the story of Noah and the Ark. In 1926 he wrote Der blaue Boll (translated as Squire Blue Boll or Boozer Boll), an expressionist drama in which the eponymous squire almost succeeds in seducing a down-and-out young mother, before both achieve spiritual regeneration.[3]
Degenerate art
From 1928 onward Barlach also generated many anti-war sculptures based on his experiences in the war. This pacifist position went against the political trend during the rise of Nazism, and he was the target of much criticism. For example, the Magdeburger Ehrenmal (Magdeburg cenotaph) was ordered by the city of Magdeburg to be a memorial of World War I, and it was expected to show heroic German soldiers fighting for their glorious country. Barlach, however, created a sculpture with three German soldiers, a fresh recruit, a young officer and an old reservist, standing in a cemetery, all bearing marks of the horror, pain and desperation of the war, flanked by a mourning war widow covering her face in despair, a skeleton wearing a German army helmet, and a civilian (the face is that of Barlach himself) with his eyes closed and blocking his ears in terror. This naturally created a controversy with the pro-war population (several nationalists and Nazis claimed that the soldiers must be foreign since true Germans would be more heroic),[4] and the sculpture was removed. Friends of Barlach were able to hide the sculpture until after the war, when it was returned to the Magdeburg Cathedral. Yet the attacks on Barlach continued until his death.
In 1931 Barlach started to live with Marga Böhmer, whereas her ex-husband and Barlach's friend Bernhard Böhmer lived with his new wife Hella.
In 1936, Barlach's works were confiscated during an exhibition together with the works of Käthe Kollwitz and Wilhelm Lehmbruck, and the majority of his remaining works were confiscated as "degenerate art", for example the Güstrower Ehrenmal (Güstrow cenotaph) and the Hamburger Ehrenmal (Hamburg cenotaph). Barlach himself was prohibited from working as a sculptor, and his membership in the art academies was canceled. This rejection is reflected in his final works before his death from heart failure on 24 October 1938 in Rostock, Mecklenburg.[2] He is buried in the cemetery of Ratzeburg.
In addition to his sculpture, Barlach also wrote eight Expressionist dramas, two novels and an autobiography Ein selbsterzähltes Leben 1928, and had a distinguished oeuvre of woodcuts and lithographs from about 1910 onwards, including illustrations for his own plays.
Works
- 1894 Die Krautpflückerin (The Herb Plucker)
- 1908 Sitzendes Weib (Sitting Woman), Nürnberg
- 1914 Der Rächer (The Avenger)
- 1917 Der tote Tag (The Dead Day, play)
- 1919 Der arme Vetter (The Poor Cousin, play)
- 1920 Die Wandlungen Gottes: Der Gotliche Bettler (Transfiguration of God: Third Day)
- 1921 Die echten Sedemunds (The Real Sedemunds, play)
- 1924 Die Sintflut (The Flood, play)
- 1926 Der blaue Boll (Squire Blue Boll, play)
- 1927 Güstrower Ehrenmal (Güstrow cenotaph), Güstrow
- 1927 Der schwebende Engel (The Floating Angel)
- 1928 Der singende Mann (The Singing Man), Nürnberg
- 1928 Der Geistkämpfer (The Ghost Fighter; The Fighter of the Spirit[5]), Kiel
- 1929 Magdeburger Ehrenmal (Magdeburg cenotaph), Cathedral of Magdeburg, Magdeburg
- 1930 Bettler auf Krücken (Beggar on Crutches )
- 1931 Hamburger Ehrenmal (Hamburg cenotaph), Hamburg
- 1936 Der Buchleser (The Book Reader), Schwerin
Sales
On 2 May 2012,(barlaches highest paid art) Barlach's carved wood sculpture Weinende Frau sold at Christie's for $938,500, setting a new world auction record for a price paid for Barlach's work.
Works cited
- Banham, Martin, ed. 1998. "Barlach, Ernst" In The Cambridge Guide to Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-43437-8. p. 78–79.
- Ritchie, James McPherson, ed. 1968 Seven Expressionist Plays. German Expressionism Ser. London: John Calder, Dallas: Riverrun, 1980. ISBN 0-7145-0521-8.
Notes
Footnotes
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Citations
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References
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- Allan, Seán (2019). "Experiments in Modernism I: From Bitterfeld to Barlach." In: Screening Art: Modernist Aesthetics and the Socialist Imaginary in East German Cinema. New York: Berghahn Books, pp. 87–138.
- Anderson, Bernard R. (1968). "The Grotesque in Barlach’s Works: Towards an Understanding of His World." In: Michael S. Batts & Marketa Goetz-Stankiewicz, eds., Essays on German Literature in Honour of G. Joyce Hallamore. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, pp. 62–93.
- Chick, Edson M. (1962). "Ernst Barlach's "Der arme Vetter": A Study," The Modern Language Review, Vol. LVII, No. 3, pp. 373–84.
- Chick, Edson M. (1963). "Ernst Barlach and the Theater," The German Quarterly, Vol. XXXVI, No. 1, pp. 39–51.
- Fechter, Paul (1960). Ernst Barlach. Gütersloh: Bertelsmann Lesering.
- Hatfield, Henry (1974). "Cave Matrem: The Battle of the Sexes in Ernst Barlach's Der Tote Tag." In: Donald H. Crosby & George C. Schoolfield, eds., Studies in the German Drama: A Festschrift in Honor of Walter Silz. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, pp. 225–34.
- McFarlane, J. W. (1954). "Plasticity in Language: Some Notes on the Prose Style of Ernst Barlach," The Modern Language Review, Vol. 49XLIX, No. 4, pp. 451–60.
- Paret, Peter (2003). An Artist Against the Third Reich: Ernst Barlach, 1933–1938. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Reid, J. H. (1977). "The Halves and the Whole: Another Look at Ernst Barlach's "Der Arme Vetter"," The Modern Language Review, Vol. LXXII, No. 3, pp. 615–26.
- Segal, Joes (2016). "National and Degenerate Art: The Third Reich." In: Art and Politics: Between Purity and Propaganda. Amsterdam University Press, pp. 45–60.
- Van Dyke, James (2013). "Ernst Barlach and the Conservative Revolution," German Studies Review, Vol. XXXVI, No. 2, pp. 281–305.
- Werner, Alfred (1962). "Ernst Barlach," The Kenyon Review, Vol. XXIV, No. 4, pp. 627–43.
- Werner, Alfred (1962–1963). "Ernst Barlach: Artist under a Dictatorship," Art Journal, Vol. XXII, No. 2, pp. 81–87.
External links
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- Ernst Barlach Society, Hamburg Retrieved 15 July 2007.
- Ernst Barlach Society, Hamburg (original German)
- Ernst Barlach Image Archive (English & German)
- Online Bibliography of Secondary Literature
- Ernst Barlach House, Hamburg (English & German)
- ub.fu-berlin.de – Annotated collection of links (German)
- Ernst Barlach: Goethe's Walpurgisnacht (German)
- Works by Ernst Barlach at Projekt Gutenberg-DE (German)
- Newspaper clippings about Ernst Barlach in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW
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- ↑ [1]
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Modlin, Yvonne. "Barlach, Ernst" In The Dictionary of Art. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1996. v 3, p. 242. ISBN 0-19-517068-7.
- ↑ See Banham (1998) and Ritchie (1968).
- ↑ Domprediger Giselher Quast (1992); Ilona Laudan, "Ernst Barlach, Das Denkmal des Krieges in Dom zu Magdeburg"
- ↑ Photo of the copy in Minneapolis
- Pages with reference errors
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- 1870 births
- 1938 deaths
- 20th-century German dramatists and playwrights
- 20th-century German male artists
- 20th-century German sculptors
- Académie Julian alumni
- Art Nouveau sculptors
- Expressionist sculptors
- German expressionist dramatists and playwrights
- German male dramatists and playwrights
- German male sculptors
- Kleist Prize winners
- Lutheran pacifists
- Modernist theatre
- People from the Province of Schleswig-Holstein
- People from Wedel
- Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class)
- Writers from Schleswig-Holstein