Skip to main content Skip to search Skip to main navigation
She was not only a talented artist but also a shrewd free thinker and hostess: at the beginning of the twentieth century famous artists including Wassily Kandinsky, Gabriele Münter, Alfred Kubin, Adolf Erbslöh, Erma Bossi, Franz Marc and August Macke assembled in Marianne von Werefkins salon in the Schwabing district of Munich. After a long break from painting in order to further her companion Alexej Jawlensky, Werefkin returned to her own art in 1906 and created fascinating works in a new, expressive style. Descended from a family of Russian aristocrats, the artist was an important forerunner and co-founder of the Neue Künstlervereinigung München (Munich New Artists Association), from which the Blauer Reiter developed. In addition to the artists early works from Russia and the Expressionist pictures which resulted from her sojourns in the region around Murnau, the Werefkin specialist Brigitte Salmen presents an appreciation of the artists later work, which is less well known and which was created in Ascona, where she lived in exile in Switzerland.
Artists
Alexej Jawlensky, Brigitte Salmen
Edited by
Brigitte Salmen
Contributions by
Product Safety
Hirmer Verlag GmbH, Bayerstr. 57-59, 80335 München, mail@hirmerverlag.de, Safety instruction according to Art. 9 Para. 7 Sentence 2 of the GPSR not required.

Further recommendations

Loading recommendations...