polybooru
Login Posts Comments Notes Artists Tags Pools Wiki Forum More »
Listing Upload Hot Changes Help

Search

  • Help
guro
scat

Artist

  • ? caspar david friedrich 1

General

  • ? 1800s 46
  • ? 1810s 1
  • ? 1817 1
  • ? 1boy 30
  • ? back view 7
  • ? boots 11
  • ? cane 5
  • ? cloak 28
  • ? clothing 124
  • ? cloud 11
  • ? fog 1
  • ? footwear 25
  • ? german 4
  • ? hamburger kunsthalle 1
  • ? landscape 14
  • ? long sleeves 8
  • ? mountain 5
  • ? outdoors 39
  • ? pale skin 13
  • ? tree 23

Meta

  • ? german romanticism 1
  • ? incredibly absurdres 190
  • ? oil painting (medium) 68
  • ? painting (medium) 69
  • ? romanticism 4

Information

  • ID: 340
  • Uploader: Apollonian »
  • Date: 14 days ago
  • Approver: KurayamiXIII »
  • Size: 29.8 MB .jpg (5256x6742) »
  • Source: web.archive.org/web/20190714043512/https://www.hamburger-kunsthalle.de/sammlung-online/caspar-david-friedrich/wanderer-ueber-dem-nebelmeer »
  • Rating: General
  • Views: 68
  • Score: 3
  • Favorites: 2
  • Status: Active

Options

  • Resize to window
  • View smaller
  • View original
  • Find similar
  • Download

History

  • Tags
  • Pools
  • Notes
  • Moderation
  • Commentary
Resized to 16% of original (view original)
by caspar_david_friedrich
Original Commentary Translated Commentary

Der Wanderer über dem Nebelmeer

Wanderer above the Sea of Fog

"Wanderer above the Sea of ​​Fog" is considered the epitome of Romanticism. No other work by Caspar David Friedrich is reproduced or referenced so frequently, and chosen as a starting point for new visual inventions in ever-new variations. Yet the painting is rather unusual for Friedrich's oeuvre: firstly, it is one of his few vertical format works, and secondly, Friedrich rarely placed a single individual so prominently and unmistakably at the center of a composition. While the history of its reception testifies to how much many viewers still try to empathize with the figure of the wanderer, Friedrich was likely not primarily concerned with such identification. He shows us a figure seen from behind, whose position is not readily accessible to us. Moreover, we are not shown what the wanderer is looking at. Instead of being able to enjoy the majestic mountain landscape unhindered, we look at a viewer. It is therefore above all a reflection on seeing that Friedrich's Wanderer invites us to.

-Johannes Grave

  • ‹ prev Search: long_sleeves status:any next ›
  • Comments
  • There are no comments.

    Terms / Privacy / Contact /