“Make the painting more personal.” — Max Beckmann
Max Beckmann dreamed up a world of actors, cabaret singers, heroes, and thugs, whose dramas unfold on city streets, at masquerades and carnivals, and in candlelit chambers. The artist himself is often part of the action, usually costumed, but identifiable by his enormous head and scowling face. At a time when many of his German contemporaries were experimenting with abstraction, Beckmann resolutely pursued the possibilities of figuration and narrative, peppering his paintings with fragments of myths, bible stories, and opaque allegories—often interspersed with scenes and figures from his life. After he received initial recognition for history paintings and portraits, with muted palettes, an impressionistic paint handling, and references to Old Masters like Michelangelo and Peter Paul Rubens, the course of Beckmann’s life and art shifted at the outbreak of World War I. He joined the medical corps, and at first he was energized by the turmoil of war, writing “my art can gorge itself here.” But the action soon ended for him after he had a nervous breakdown in 1915. Over the next decade, he captured the doomed Weimar Republic with acidic cynicism, creating jam-packed, riotously colored canvases populated by a cast of characters enacting the chaos of postwar urban life. He also focused on etching and lithography in these years, producing several black-and-white print portfolios, including Hell (1918–19), which features scenes of a devastated Berlin. The city’s inhabitants torture one another, clamp their eyelids shut, and dance frantically. In the early 1930s, the National Socialist press began to attack Beckmann’s work, and in 1933, soon after Hitler was appointed chancellor of Germany, the artist was dismissed from his teaching position at Frankfurt’s Städel Art School, and his paintings at the Berlin National Gallery were removed from view. It was in this time of mounting terror and uncertainty that Beckmann began to paint the triptych Departure (1932–35), in which he has juxtaposed restraint and freedom, compression and openness, violence and refuge. Its outer panels are consumed by scenes of torture in a dimly lit theater, while in the center panel archaic figures appear on a boat in calm seas under a clear, bright sky. In 1937, on the day after many of his works were included in the Degenerate Art exhibition, Beckmann left for Amsterdam, where he lived during World War II. He remained active in exile, turning to mythic, parabolic images unmoored from a particular time or place. In 1947, he was able to immigrate to America, where he taught in St. Louis and New York. Sharing his own mantra with his students, he often told them, “work a lot…simplify…use lots of color…make the painting more personal.”
Hillary Reder, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and Prints, 2016
Works in Collection
218 works
Dancing (Tanzende) from the second Ganymede-Portfolio (zw...
Max Beckmann
(1922)
Dancing Couple (Tanzendes Paar)
Max Beckmann
1922
Dancing Couple (Tanzpaar) from Day and Dream
Max Beckmann
(1946)
David and Bathsheba (David und Bathseba)
Max Beckmann
1911 (published c. 1917)
Day and Dream
Max Beckmann
1946
Deaf and Dumb (Taubstumme) from the deluxe edition of the...
Max Beckmann
(1921)
Declaration of War (Die Kriegserklärung)
Max Beckmann
1914
Departure
Max Beckmann
Frankfurt 1932, Berlin 1933-35
Der Mensch ist kein Haustier (Man Is Not a Domestic Animal)
Max Beckmann
1937
Descent from the Cross
Max Beckmann
1917
Descent from the Cross (Kreuzabnahme) from Faces (Gesichter)
Max Beckmann
printed 1918, published 1919
Deutsche Graphiker der Gegenwart (German Printmakers of O...
Ernst Barlach
1920
Die Fürstin (The Duchess)
Max Beckmann
1918
Dostoyevsky II (Dostojewski II) from the first Ganymede-P...
Max Beckmann
(1921)
Dream II (Der Traum II)
Max Beckmann
(1924, dated 1923)
Dream of War (Der Traum vom Krieg) from Day and Dream
Max Beckmann
(1946)
Dressing Room (Garderobe) from Annual Fair (Jahrmarkt)
Max Beckmann
(1921, published 1922)
Drinking Song (Trinklied) (plate 1) from Stadtnacht (City...
Max Beckmann
1921
Ebbi
Max Beckmann
1924
Embrace (Umarmung)
Max Beckmann
(1922)
Evening (Self-Portrait with the Battenbergs) [Der Abend (...
Max Beckmann
printed 1916, published 1919
Evening Party (Abendgesellschaft)
Max Beckmann
(1912, published not before 1917)
Fallen Soldiers (Gefallene Soldaten)
Max Beckmann
(1914)
Family Picture
Max Beckmann
Frankfurt 1920
Exhibitions
72 exhibitionsMar 12, 1931 – Apr 22, 1931
German Painting and Sculpture
27 artists · 1 curator
Jun 07, 1932 – Oct 30, 1932
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture
57 artists
Jul 11, 1934 – Sep 13, 1934
New Acquisitions: Lachaise Torso; Prints
21 artists
Nov 19, 1934 – Jan 20, 1935
Modern Works of Art: 5th Anniversary Exhibition
117 artists
Jun 04, 1935 – Sep 24, 1935
Summer Exhibition: The Museum Collection and a Private Collection on Loan
53 artists
Jan 14, 1936 – Feb 16, 1936
New Acquisitions: The Collection of Mrs. John D. Rockefeller, Jr.
53 artists
Jun 23, 1937 – Nov 04, 1937
Summer Exhibition: Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection and on Loan
53 artists
May 10, 1939 – Sep 30, 1939
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
154 artists
May 06, 1941 – Apr 30, 1941
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
74 artists
Jun 24, 1942 – Aug 24, 1942
New Acquisitions: Free German Art
4 artists
Dec 09, 1942 – Jan 24, 1943
Twentieth Century Portraits
159 artists · 1 curator
Feb 16, 1944 – May 10, 1944
Modern Drawings
120 artists · 3 curators
May 24, 1944 – Oct 15, 1944
Painting, Sculpture, Prints
133 artists · 1 curator
Mar 06, 1945 – Mar 25, 1945
What is Modern Painting?
37 artists
Jun 20, 1945 – Feb 13, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting and Sculpture
174 artists
Feb 19, 1946 – May 05, 1946
The Museum Collection of Painting
67 artists
Jul 02, 1946 – Sep 12, 1954
Paintings, Sculpture, and Graphic Arts from the Museum Collection
112 artists · 1 curator
Apr 01, 1947 – May 04, 1947
Large-Scale Modern Paintings
16 artists · 1 curator
Jun 01, 1948 – Sep 06, 1948
Portraits in Prints
29 artists · 1 curator
Oct 01, 1948 – Oct 31, 1948
Print Gift of Victor S. Riesenfeld and Matisse: Jazz: Gift of the Artist
31 artists · 1 curator
May 10, 1949 – Jul 10, 1949
Master Prints from the Museum Collection
132 artists · 2 curators
Aug 03, 1949 – Oct 05, 1949
Sculpture by Painters
12 artists
Jul 25, 1950 – Nov 05, 1950
Recent Acquisitions
15 artists
Aug 29, 1950 – Oct 15, 1950
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
72 artists · 1 curator
Mar 27, 1951 – Jun 03, 1951
New Lamps
24 artists · 1 curator
Jul 18, 1951 – Aug 19, 1951
Modern Bible Illustration
20 artists · 1 curator
Sep 18, 1951 – Oct 24, 1951
Prints by Max Beckmann
1 artist
May 06, 1952 – Jun 08, 1952
Recent Acquisitions
36 artists · 1 curator
Jun 23, 1953 – Oct 04, 1953
Summer Exhibition: New Acquisitions; Recent American Prints, 19471953; Katherine S. Dreier Bequest; Kuniyoshi and Spencer; Expressionism in Germany; Varieties of Realism
100 artists · 2 curators
Oct 19, 1954 – Feb 06, 1955
XXVth Anniversary Exhibition: Paintings from the Museum Collection
260 artists
Dec 07, 1954 – Feb 01, 1955
Modern Masterprints of Europe
72 artists · 1 curator
Mar 05, 1955 – Apr 24, 1955
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection: New Acquisitions
22 artists · 1 curator
Nov 30, 1955 – Feb 22, 1956
Recent Acquisitions
44 artists
Nov 28, 1956 – Jan 20, 1957
Recent European Acquisitions
37 artists · 1 curator
Oct 02, 1957 – Dec 01, 1957
German Art of the 20th Century
42 artists · 2 curators
Oct 08, 1958
Second Floor Permanent Collection
28 artists
May 04, 1960 – Sep 18, 1960
Portraits from the Museum Collection
92 artists · 1 curator
Oct 11, 1960 – Jan 02, 1961
100 Drawings from the Museum Collection
74 artists · 1 curator
Aug 19, 1961 – Jan 30, 1962
Modern Allegories
20 artists · 1 curator
Aug 06, 1963 – Sep 29, 1963
60 Modern Drawings: Recent Acquisitions
45 artists · 1 curator
May 27, 1964
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
169 artists
May 27, 1964 – Feb 07, 1965
From the Museum Collections: Family Portraits
13 artists
Oct 16, 1964 – Jan 31, 1965
Max Beckmann
1 artist · 3 curators
Dec 21, 1966 – Mar 05, 1967
The Taste of a Connoisseur: The Paul J. Sachs Collection
68 artists · 1 curator
Apr 28, 1967 – Apr 30, 1967
The Artist as His Subject
46 artists · 2 curators
Jun 06, 1967 – Sep 17, 1967
The Artist as His Subject
49 artists
May 28, 1969 – Sep 01, 1969
Twentieth-Century Art from the Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller Collection
119 artists · 1 curator
Nov 10, 1970 – Apr 21, 1971
The Nude: Thirty 20th-Century Drawings
24 artists · 1 curator
Jul 01, 1971 – Sep 27, 1971
The Artist as Adversary
140 artists · 1 curator
Mar 07, 1973 – Jun 04, 1973
Works on Paper
58 artists
Oct 12, 1973 – Feb 02, 1974
Published in Germany, 1923
17 artists · 2 curators
Aug 30, 1974 – Nov 10, 1974
German Drawing: The Expressionists
24 artists · 1 curator
Mar 07, 1975 – Jun 08, 1975
Points of View
29 artists · 1 curator
Aug 05, 1975 – Sep 28, 1975
Modern Masters: Manet to Matisse
21 artists · 1 curator
May 14, 1976 – Aug 08, 1976
Prints from the Collection
30 artists
Aug 20, 1976 – Nov 14, 1976
Between World Wars: Drawing in Europe and America
66 artists · 1 curator
Apr 28, 1978 – Jul 04, 1978
A Treasury of Modern Drawing: The Joan and Lester Avnet Collection
89 artists · 1 curator
Nov 14, 1979 – Jan 22, 1980
Art of the Twenties
167 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1981 – Oct 06, 1981
Words and Pictures
49 artists · 1 curator
Mar 03, 1983 – May 15, 1983
Prints from Blocks: Gauguin to Now
128 artists · 1 curator
Oct 26, 1983 – Jan 03, 1984
The Modern Drawing: 100 Works on Paper from The Museum of Modern Art
81 artists · 1 curator
Dec 01, 1983 – Jan 03, 1984
Selections from the Collection of Painting and Sculpture
4 artists
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Prints and Illustrated Books
99 artists · 2 curators
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Drawings
61 artists · 2 curators
May 06, 1985 – Dec 18, 1985
The Expressionist Idiom
43 artists · 1 curator
May 26, 1985 – Oct 29, 1985
Drawing in Austria and Germany
41 artists · 1 curator
May 29, 1986 – Sep 30, 1986
Naked/Nude
63 artists · 1 curator
Oct 24, 1987 – Mar 01, 1988
European Drawing Between the Wars
59 artists · 1 curator
Nov 20, 1987 – Mar 08, 1988
Master Prints from the Collection
66 artists · 1 curator
Mar 16, 1989 – Jul 04, 1989
Watercolors: Selections from the Permanent Collection
39 artists · 1 curator
Apr 06, 1989 – Aug 08, 1989
Master Prints from the Collection
102 artists · 1 curator
Nov 16, 1989 – Mar 13, 1990
Prints: Proofs and Variants
25 artists · 1 curator