Ernst Ludwig Kirchner,
Portrait of Otto Müller,
a woodcut
Germany, AD 1915
The finest example of a Brücke
print
Kirchner's output of paintings,
drawings and prints from mid-September to mid-December 1915 in
Berlin, was remarkable, despite the physical and mental breakdown
which had given him a provisional discharge from the German army.
The most striking of the prints were colour
woodcuts,
including two portraits of his close friend Otto Müller
(1874-1930), another painter and printmaker whom he first met in
Berlin in 1910. Müller joined Die Brücke, the group of avant-garde
artists of which Kirchner had been a founder member in Dresden in
1905, remaining a key figure until its dissolution in 1913.
Printmaking was central to their activities and above all, to the
career of Kirchner; his total production consists of nearly 1000
woodcuts, more than 650
etchings
and
drypoints
and 450 lithographs.
The
vividly expressionist, 'primitive' style associated
with Die Brücke is exemplified by this remarkable composition,
halfway between a woodcut and a monotype, for which Kirchner used a
single block, colouring it with a brush. In the first two
states
of the print he left the background almost unworked; the cat, the
bow tie and the two eyes reminiscent of Egyptian art in the bottom
corners were added in the third state. This
impression,
of the fourth state, formerly belonged to Gustav Schiefler, the
Hamburg judge and collector who compiled the first catalogue
raisonné of Kirchner's prints in 1926 and 1931
respectively.
F. Carey and A. Griffiths, The print in Germany 1880-1933, exh. cat. (London, The British Museum Press, 1984)