Max Liebermann (1847-1935)
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Max Liebermann (1847-1935)

Spaziergänger am Wannseeufer

Details
Max Liebermann (1847-1935)
Spaziergänger am Wannseeufer
signed 'M Liebermann' (lower right); signed and dated 'M Liebermann 1924' (on the reverse)
oil on panel
12½ x 16 1/8 in. (31.7 x 41 cm.)
Painted in 1924
Provenance
Dr Curt Sluzewski, by whom acquired from the artist on 28 November 1925, and thence by descent; sale, Christie's, London, 24 June 1983, lot 59.
Gemälde-Cabinett Unger, Munich.
Anonymous sale, Weiner, Munich, 14 April 1984, lot 310.
Galerie Norbert Blaeser, Düsseldorf, until 1985.
Acquired in 1985 and thence by descent to the present owner.
Literature
Weltkunst, vol. LIV, 1984, no. 5, p. 550 (illustrated).
H.P. Richardson, Landscape in the work of Max Liebermann, vol. II, Ann Arbor, 1991, no. 742, p. 259.
M. Eberle, Max Liebermann 1847-1935, Werkverzeichnis der Gemälde und Ölstudien, vol. II, 1900-1935, Munich, 1996, no. 1924/33 (illustrated p. 1119).
Exhibited
Hamburg, Kunsthalle, Im Garten von Max Liebermann, June - September 2004, no. 62 (illustrated p. 143).
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 17.5% will be added to the buyer's premium, which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

In 1910, Liebermann acquired some land by the Wannsee near Berlin, and the following year had a summerhouse and studio erected, built with finances Liebermann proudly claimed he had 'painted' in just two years. Closely modelled on a villa in Hamburg and inspired by Dutch patrician country houses, the house became a summer retreat for the artist as he entered his final creative phase. Moreover, with its spacious, landscaped grounds, designed with the help of his friend, Alfred Lichtwark, which extended all the way to the lakeside, the site proved a fertile source of artistic inspiration from 1910 onwards. Indeed, such was Liebermann's affinity with the villa's gardens that he came to call them his Freilichtatelier.

Spaziergänger am Wannseeufer displays Liebermann's superb synthesis of Impressionist style. As a mature artist at the height of his powers, Liebermann's most expressive post-war pictures are characterised by tremendous light effects and a lively brushstroke. The fresh, vivacious subject of the picture is equalled in importance by the work's exploration of rich, sun-drenched colour. The handling, moreover, with its very direct and gestural use of the palette knife, its dynamic, improvisitory brushwork and its lively impasto, betrays a similar debt to the experiments of the French masters for whom Liebermann had such respect. Liebermann's touch, texture and compositional sense in the Wannsee pictures is rarely bettered and Spaziergänger am Wannseeufer is a superlative example of these works.

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