Arnold Böcklin

  Arnold Böcklin
  1827-1901

Arnold Böcklin     Arnold Böcklin was Swiss Symbolist painter whose moody landscapes and sinister allegories greatly influenced late 19th-century German artists and presaged the symbolism of the 20th-century Metaphysical and Surrealistic artists.

    Arnold Böcklin, also known as Arnold Boecklin, was born 1827, in Basel, Switzerland. Although he studied and worked throughout much of northern Europe, Düsseldorf, Antwerp, Brussels, and Paris, Böcklin found his real inspiration in the landscape of Italy. There he returned from time to time and where the last years of his life were spent.

    Böcklin first won a reputation with the large mural “Pan in the Bulrushes” (c. 1857), which brought him the patronage of the king of Bavaria. From 1858 to 1861, he taught at the Weimar Art School, but his nostalgia for the Italian landscape pursued him. After an interval during which he completed his mythological frescoes for the decoration of the Public Art Collection (Öffentliche Kunstsammlung), in Basel, he settled in Italy and only occasionally returned to Germany, and then to experiment with flying machines.

    During his last two decades, Böcklin’s work became increasingly subjective, often showing fabulous creatures or being based on dark allegorical themes, as in “Island of the Dead” (1880), which provided the inspiration for the symphonic poem The Isle of the Dead by the Russian composer Sergey Rachmaninoff. Such spectral scenes as his “Odysseus and Calypso” (1883) and “The Pest” (1898) reveal the morbid symbolism that anticipated the so-called Freudian imagery of much 20th-century art.

    He died Jan. 16, 1901, Fiesole, in Italy.

Related Ways to Take Action:
Powered by Social Actions
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply