Seated Child
Paula Modersohn-Becker (Dresden 1876 - Worpswede 1907)
Lot-No. 331
Proceeds : 3.500 €
Around 1900/1922. Dry point. 8,5 x 12 cm. Lo. le. inscribed by Otto Modersohn 'f. P- Modersohn-Becker O. Modersohn', matted and framed under glass. Pale mat burn. - Literature: Cat. rais.: Werner 9 b - Provenance: Gallery R. E. Lewis & Daughter, San Rafael, 7.11.2007; since then private collection The Hague - One of the most important German artists of the avantgarde. M.-B. began studying at the drawing school of the 'Verein Berliner Künstlerinnen' since 1896. In 1898 she moved to Worpswede to be taught by F. Mackensen. In 1900 she took lessons at the Académie Colarossi in Paris together with C. Westhoff, the later wife of R. M. Rilke. After returning to Worpswede she married O. Modersohn. In 1903, 1905 and 1906 she returned to Paris and, inspired by Cezanne and Gauguin, developed her own distinct style. She died in childbirth in 1907. Because she exhibited rarely her artistical achievements were known to few, but she was widely appreciated soon after her death. Mus.: Bremen (Paula Modersohn-Becker-Mus., Kunsthalle), Hamburg (Kunsthalle), Wuppertal (Von der Heydt-Mus.), Hannover (Kestner-Ges.), Essen (Folkwang-Mus.), Düsseldorf, Cologne a. others. Lit.: Thieme-Becker a. many more.
Paula Modersohn-Becker: Seated Child
Paula Modersohn-Becker (Dresden 1876 - Worpswede 1907)
Seated Child
Lot-No. 331
Proceeds : 3.500 €
Around 1900/1922. Dry point. 8,5 x 12 cm. Lo. le. inscribed by Otto Modersohn 'f. P- Modersohn-Becker O. Modersohn', matted and framed under glass. Pale mat burn. - Literature: Cat. rais.: Werner 9 b - Provenance: Gallery R. E. Lewis & Daughter, San Rafael, 7.11.2007; since then private collection The Hague - One of the most important German artists of the avantgarde. M.-B. began studying at the drawing school of the 'Verein Berliner Künstlerinnen' since 1896. In 1898 she moved to Worpswede to be taught by F. Mackensen. In 1900 she took lessons at the Académie Colarossi in Paris together with C. Westhoff, the later wife of R. M. Rilke. After returning to Worpswede she married O. Modersohn. In 1903, 1905 and 1906 she returned to Paris and, inspired by Cezanne and Gauguin, developed her own distinct style. She died in childbirth in 1907. Because she exhibited rarely her artistical achievements were known to few, but she was widely appreciated soon after her death. Mus.: Bremen (Paula Modersohn-Becker-Mus., Kunsthalle), Hamburg (Kunsthalle), Wuppertal (Von der Heydt-Mus.), Hannover (Kestner-Ges.), Essen (Folkwang-Mus.), Düsseldorf, Cologne a. others. Lit.: Thieme-Becker a. many more.