Franz Marc’s Stella Peregrina: A Collection of Illustrated Poems
Stella Peregrina: achtzehn Faksimile-Nachbildungen nach den Originalen by Franz Marc(1880–1916) has a beautifully marbled cover, but what is inside is even more intriguing. There are 18 facsimile reproductions of Marc’s drawings, hand-colored by Annette von Eckardt, each accompanied by German poems by different authors. Between 1904 and 1909, Marc worked on the illustrations of poems by Emil Prinz, Gustav Renner, Richard Dehmel, Carmen Sylva and many others. The illustrations in this book have a somewhat melancholy nature, which reflects Marc’s emotional state at that time—pessimism due to troubled love affairs.1
This oversized book was published posthumously by Franz Hanfstaengl in Munich in 1917 as a limited edition of 110 items. It includes an introduction by Hermann Bahr (1863–1934), an Austrian writer, playwright, director and critic on Expressionism. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library Special Collections has copy no. 20 of 110.
Kimbell Art Museum
Stella Peregrina: achtzehn Faksimile-Nachbildungen nach den Originalen by Franz Marc(1880–1916) has a beautifully marbled cover, but what is inside is even more intriguing. There are 18 facsimile reproductions of Marc’s drawings, hand-colored by Annette von Eckardt, each accompanied by German poems by different authors. Between 1904 and 1909, Marc worked on the illustrations of poems by Emil Prinz, Gustav Renner, Richard Dehmel, Carmen Sylva and many others. The illustrations in this book have a somewhat melancholy nature, which reflects Marc’s emotional state at that time—pessimism due to troubled love affairs.1
This oversized book was published posthumously by Franz Hanfstaengl in Munich in 1917 as a limited edition of 110 items. It includes an introduction by Hermann Bahr (1863–1934), an Austrian writer, playwright, director and critic on Expressionism. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum Library Special Collections has copy no. 20 of 110.
Kimbell Art Museum
Only two more weeks to view the “Bass” collection. Did you know that Marc’s painting “Large Lenggries Horse Painting I” was not discovered until twenty years after his tragic death in World War I? #kimbellart#franzmarc #lostandfound
Franz Marc, "Genesis II (Schopfungsgeschichte II)," 1914, woodcut in yellow, black, and green http://1.usa.gov/1CX0FI2
Franz Marc was born today in 1880. Discover the symbolism in his 1911 painting "Yellow Cow" from the Guggenheim collection:http://gu.gg/IGXla
One of the founding members of Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider), artist Franz Marc was born on this day in 1880. His painting Stables (Stallungen)—the last major work based on his favorite subject, the horse—was completed by 1913: http://gu.gg/Y4U6W
Franz Marc | |
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Franz Marc in 1910
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Born | 8 February 1880 Munich, Bavaria, German Empire |
Died | 4 March 1916 (aged 36) Braquis, France |
Nationality | German |
Education | Academy of Fine Arts, Munich |
Known for | Painting |
Notable work(s) | Fate of the Animals, Tiger,The Yellow Cow, Fighting Forms |
Movement | Expressionism |
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