2. Should art be beautiful?

Lyonel Feininger
Barfüsserkirche II (Church of the Minorites II), 1926
oil on canvas unframed 42.75 x 36.625 x 2.5 inches Gift of the T. B. Walker Foundation, Gilbert M. Walker Fund, 1943 Copyright 1998 Walker Art Center
An American artist of German descent, Lyonel Feininger studied music in Germany, then abandoned a promising career as a violinist to become an artist. Although he turned his concentration toward the visual arts, Feininger consistently created his work with a musician’s sensitivity. Paintings, he once wrote, "have to sing, must enrapture, and must not stop at portraying an episode."
Although greatly influenced by the geometric aspects of Cubism, Feininger developed his own colorful and romantic version of this style. Conceptually, he wanted to achieve a spiritual synthesis of the natural and man-made world in his paintings by depicting such subjects as architecture and human forms as prismatically colored, interpenetrating planes. In Barfüsserkirche II (Church of the Minorites II), Feininger created a pictorial communion of a church (kirche) and the German Franciscan monks (Barfüsser) who reside there by depicting a harmonious composition of repeated transparent colors, shapes, and lines.
Hide Information
|
Credits| ©2004 Walker Art Center