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Further details: <http://www.tate.org.uk/modern/exhibitions/beckmann/>.
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TATE MODERN

Max Beckmann
13 February - 5 May 2003

Max Beckmann is widely acknowledged as one of Germany's leading
twentieth-century artists. A figurative painter throughout his career,
Beckmann depicted the world around him with an unparalleled intensity.
His work emerges directly from his experiences of the First and Second
World Wars, the political upheavals of the 1920s and 1930s, the rise of
Nazism, exile in Amsterdam and his final emigration to the United
States. By capturing the objects and events that surrounded him,
Beckmann hoped to grasp the deeper mysteries underlying human
existence. He perceived and painted the world as a vast stage, at once
real and magical, upon which his own life and the traumas of
contemporary history were closely intertwined.

Beckmann continuously engaged with new artistic developments and was
eager to compete with his peers. However, he refused to join any
movement or group, cultivating the image of an isolated figure within
the history of modern art. Nevertheless, his work after the First World
War had strong affinities with German Expressionism and Cubism. During
the 1920s Beckmann was regarded as a forerunner of New Objectivity
(Neue Sachlichkeit), and a decade later incorporated abstract elements
in his paintings. His ability to respond to artistic challenges ensured
the continuing vitality of his art.

This retrospective provides a largely chronological overview of
Beckmann's artistic career. It focuses on three pivotal periods: 1918-
23, 1927-32 and the late 1930s into the 1940s. The first period
reflects the impact of the First World War, during which Beckmann
served as a medical orderly. By contrast, the second period is coloured
by prosperity and public recognition. The final period is once again
marked by the experience of war. Under the Nazi regime Beckmann was
classified as a 'degenerate' artist and fled to Amsterdam in 1937. Even
though this was a time of privation, isolation and anxiety, it was one
of Beckmann's most productive periods. The exhibition ends with
Beckmann in America, where, in the last three years of his life, he
once again achieved widespread recognition as a major force in modern
art.

This exhibition is a collaboration between Tate Modern, London, The
Museum of Modern Art, New York, and Musée Georges Pompidou, Paris.