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Eugen Schönebeck. Band 1: 1950 - 1960

Das Werkverzeichnis der Zeichnungen


  • Walther & Franz Koenig Verlag
  • by Ed.: Juerg Judin und Pay Matthis Karstens. Text: Pay Matthis Karstens
Not in every case is the early work of an artist decisive for his later artistic development. With Eugen Schönebeck, however, things are different-not only because of his brief public-oriented production, which in any case makes classical definitions of early, major, and late works difficult. But in fact, the early drawings, which were created between 1950 and 1960 in the context of and parallel to his three-part artistic training in East and West Germany, can be accorded a central position in his oeuvre.

ISBN 9783960989202 | E/ G | HB
€80,00
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Publisher Walther & Franz Koenig Verlag
ISBN 9783960989202
Author(s) Ed.: Juerg Judin und Pay Matthis Karstens. Text: Pay Matthis Karstens
Publication date December 2020
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 310 x 245 mm
Pages 224
Language(s) Eng./ Germ. ed.
Description

Not in every case is the early work of an artist decisive for his later artistic development. With Eugen Schönebeck, however, things are different-not only because of his brief public-oriented production, which in any case makes classical definitions of early, major, and late works difficult. But in fact, the early drawings, which were created between 1950 and 1960 in the context of and parallel to his three-part artistic training in East and West Germany, can be accorded a central position in his oeuvre. For although these works naturally were created in the field of tension between external impulses and the artist's own, they were already breaking ground for the motifs, styles, and techniques with which he would develop his iconic, major work. The early drawings document his struggle for artistic autonomy within two art-political systems that each sought to impose unambiguous roles and narrowly defined means of expression on their artists. Schönebeck's early work thus signals his artistic emancipation from both German states and their respective artistic doctrines. But Schönebeck's oeuvre not only articulates a radical artistic and individual path in divided Germany-his oeuvre is also paradigmatic of a generation of artists who left the young