Stand 15.05.2024

Hans Thoma

Lot 320
Schwarzwaldlandschaft mit spielenden Kindern, 1867
Oil on canvas

58.5 x 77.5 cm

Lot 320
Schwarzwaldlandschaft mit spielenden Kindern, 1867
Oil on canvas
58,5 x 77,5 cm

Schätzpreis:
€ 30.000 - 40.000
Auktion: 6 Tage

Ketterer Kunst GmbH & Co KG

Ort: Munich
Auktion: 08.06.2024
Auktionsnummer: 555
Auktionsname: 19th Century Art

Lot Details
Oil on canvas. Lower right signed and dated. With gallery and museum labels on the reverse. 58.5 x 77.5 cm.
- Thomas's scenes from the Black Forest are considered masterful, harmonious contemporary versions of the motif of idyll and utopia - His home region shaped his landscape repertoire and remained a painterly place of longing throughout his life - Exceptional, atmospheric composition in a pictorial language unique to Thoma: the lovely river valley in the center, the scenery permeated by a warm, even light - Important provenance: once in the important collection of German and French 19th century art of Carl Sachs, Wroclaw.
Galerie Sturm, Munich (with the label on the reverse, no. 169). Carl Sachs (1858-1943), Wrocalw (1917-1939) Fritz Nathan 1939/40 (inv. no. 224). Galerie Fischer, Lucerne. Private collection Switzerland. Staatliche Kunsthalle, Karlsruhe (1983; with the label on the reverse, inv. no. 2746: "Frühlingsweide", and another label: "Schwarzwaldlandschaft"). Returned by the Federal State of Baden-Württemberg to the heirs after Carl Sachs in 2022. Private collection Baden-Württemberg (Sotheby's, July 13, 2022) The work is free from restitution claims
With his Black Forest scenes, Thoma epitomizes the idyll, a pictorial theme that has run through art since antiquity. Thoma was born in Bernau, where he attended drawing school and repeatedly returned in summer during his studies at the Karlsruhe Academy. He studied with Schirmer and his successor Hans Frederik Gude, who let classicist traditions live on in his art. In 1867, he moved to Düsseldorf, which was an important center of landscape painting at the time. It was precisely at this time that Thomas emancipated himself from the academic ideal: "Landscape painting also has a catch; the Schirmer School taught you composing - I usually couldn't do that with the impressions that the Black Forest had to offer, and generally couldn’t with what I had seen of landscape nature up to that point; the Black Forest fir trees didn't want to fit in at all, nor did the long mountain ridges, or the vast meadows - you couldn't even think of painting them" (Thoma, Im Herbste des Lebens, 1909, p. 28). In contrast to the still predominant Italian type, painters were now also discovering other regions that found their way into the landscape and redefined the panorama of what was worth painting in their individuality. Thoma broke away from academic compositions, daringly occupying the middle ground of the picture with the course of the river - where normally the view would have to go into the distance, an unusual and new perspective. Thoma often painted and drew directly in front of nature; in paintings he made in his studio, he then assembled the impressions in his own way. He used the tranquil Black Forest valleys with their magic atmosphere, as his motif. It was precisely these secluded valleys, protected by the surrounding hills, that became his favorite motif. His landscapes are characterized by a palette of green and ochre tones and an even distribution of light, which often lends the scenes an unreal character. A quasi-religious scene of paradisiacal atmosphere with children playing that form individual small color accents, in the green fields by the stream, which becomes a characteristic element for Thoma’s landscapes, running into the center of the picture. With the small farmhouse in the sheltered idyll in the valley, he staged the topos of the locus amoenus, the lovely place, which has existed in art and literature since antiquity. In paradisiacal seclusion, this is a place of endless spring, eternal youth and harmonious tranquillity outside of time and space. Thoma's landscape is also characterized by a peculiar timeless, almost dreamlike clarity. For Thoma, the attraction of these valleys and meadows, seemingly detached from reality, surely also lies in the comforting realization that such an earthly paradise, an imaginary utopian place, can actually be found in reality. [KT]
Landscape in harmonious colors and in good condition. With a few small retouches and minor over-painted spots. Early drycracks, particularly in the darker areas. Edges slightly rubbed due to framing. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.
Lot Details
Oil on canvas. Lower right signed and dated. With gallery and museum labels on the reverse. 58.5 x 77.5 cm.
- Thomas's scenes from the Black Forest are considered masterful, harmonious contemporary versions of the motif of idyll and utopia - His home region shaped his landscape repertoire and remained a painterly place of longing throughout his life - Exceptional, atmospheric composition in a pictorial language unique to Thoma: the lovely river valley in the center, the scenery permeated by a warm, even light - Important provenance: once in the important collection of German and French 19th century art of Carl Sachs, Wroclaw.
Galerie Sturm, Munich (with the label on the reverse, no. 169). Carl Sachs (1858-1943), Wrocalw (1917-1939) Fritz Nathan 1939/40 (inv. no. 224). Galerie Fischer, Lucerne. Private collection Switzerland. Staatliche Kunsthalle, Karlsruhe (1983; with the label on the reverse, inv. no. 2746: "Frühlingsweide", and another label: "Schwarzwaldlandschaft"). Returned by the Federal State of Baden-Württemberg to the heirs after Carl Sachs in 2022. Private collection Baden-Württemberg (Sotheby's, July 13, 2022) The work is free from restitution claims
With his Black Forest scenes, Thoma epitomizes the idyll, a pictorial theme that has run through art since antiquity. Thoma was born in Bernau, where he attended drawing school and repeatedly returned in summer during his studies at the Karlsruhe Academy. He studied with Schirmer and his successor Hans Frederik Gude, who let classicist traditions live on in his art. In 1867, he moved to Düsseldorf, which was an important center of landscape painting at the time. It was precisely at this time that Thomas emancipated himself from the academic ideal: "Landscape painting also has a catch; the Schirmer School taught you composing - I usually couldn't do that with the impressions that the Black Forest had to offer, and generally couldn’t with what I had seen of landscape nature up to that point; the Black Forest fir trees didn't want to fit in at all, nor did the long mountain ridges, or the vast meadows - you couldn't even think of painting them" (Thoma, Im Herbste des Lebens, 1909, p. 28). In contrast to the still predominant Italian type, painters were now also discovering other regions that found their way into the landscape and redefined the panorama of what was worth painting in their individuality. Thoma broke away from academic compositions, daringly occupying the middle ground of the picture with the course of the river - where normally the view would have to go into the distance, an unusual and new perspective. Thoma often painted and drew directly in front of nature; in paintings he made in his studio, he then assembled the impressions in his own way. He used the tranquil Black Forest valleys with their magic atmosphere, as his motif. It was precisely these secluded valleys, protected by the surrounding hills, that became his favorite motif. His landscapes are characterized by a palette of green and ochre tones and an even distribution of light, which often lends the scenes an unreal character. A quasi-religious scene of paradisiacal atmosphere with children playing that form individual small color accents, in the green fields by the stream, which becomes a characteristic element for Thoma’s landscapes, running into the center of the picture. With the small farmhouse in the sheltered idyll in the valley, he staged the topos of the locus amoenus, the lovely place, which has existed in art and literature since antiquity. In paradisiacal seclusion, this is a place of endless spring, eternal youth and harmonious tranquillity outside of time and space. Thoma's landscape is also characterized by a peculiar timeless, almost dreamlike clarity. For Thoma, the attraction of these valleys and meadows, seemingly detached from reality, surely also lies in the comforting realization that such an earthly paradise, an imaginary utopian place, can actually be found in reality. [KT]
Landscape in harmonious colors and in good condition. With a few small retouches and minor over-painted spots. Early drycracks, particularly in the darker areas. Edges slightly rubbed due to framing. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.

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