Girl with Vase of Flowers (Mädchen mit Blumenvase)

1911
Not on view
In 1905, Schmidt-Rottluff and other artists founded Die Brücke (The Bridge), a group seeking to distance themselves from modern urban life and academic tradition in order to develop what they viewed as a more authentic art. Woodcuts were central to the group’s practice as they allowed the artists to create rough, "primitive" works seemingly freed from fine-art conventions. The technique also represented a connection with earlier German figures, ranging from self-taught artists to Albrecht Dürer (1471–1528), for whom printmaking, woodcuts in particular, held great importance. Schmidt-Rottluff produced hundreds of prints, the vast majority of which are woodcuts. In this example, made the year Brücke artists moved from Dresden to Berlin, he engaged with the traditional female nude in an unconventional manner by rendering the figure’s body with angular lines and simplified forms. Her masklike visage reflects the influence of tribal art and the forms and figures he saw at the Dresden Ethnographic Museum, where objects from the Palau Islands and other German colonies were on display. .

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • Title: Girl with Vase of Flowers (Mädchen mit Blumenvase)
  • Artist: Karl Schmidt-Rottluff (German, 1884–1976)
  • Date: 1911
  • Medium: Black ink on carved spruce woodblock
  • Dimensions: 12 13/16 x 7 13/16 in. (32.5 x 19.8 cm)
  • Classification: Blocks
  • Credit Line: Janet Lee Kadesky Ruttenberg Fund, in honor of Colta Ives, 2006
  • Object Number: 2006.496
  • Rights and Reproduction: © 2025 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
  • Curatorial Department: Drawings and Prints

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