Emil Nolde: Blaue Stiefmütterchen

“There is silver blue, sky blue and thunder blue. Every colour holds within it a soul, which makes me happy or repels me, and which acts as a stimulus. To a person who has no art in him, colours are colours, tones tones…and that is all. All their consequences for the human spirit, which range…

Emil Nolde: Flower Garden

See More Emil Nolde At Sunnyside Emil Nolde at Christie’s Read More Emil Nolde at wikiwand Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Franz Marc: Broken Forms

See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Expressionism At Sunnyside Der Blaue Reiter At Sunnyside Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc Museum website Der Blaue Reiter at wikiwand Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Franz Marc: Gemsen

“After the artist’s death on the Western Front in 1916, Marc’s widow and organizer of his estate described this work as follows: ‘In front of a stormy sky lightly tinged from purple to rusty red, draped with small clouds, blue crags with different shading (ultramarine) in the foreground, two green chamois are jumping across blue…

August Macke: Leute am blauen See

“Although the motif is generic, the painting reflects the artist’s situation during his vacation on Lake Thun, where he stayed from late September 1913 to spring 1914. “People at the Blue Lake” was created during this particularly happy time for the Macke couple. One year later, Macke, only 27 years old, died on the battlefield…

Emil Nolde: Blaue und gelbe Blüten

“Vividly painted flowers occupy pride of place within Nolde’s oeuvre. His delicate watercolours of flowers on Japan paper perfectly embody his desire to create art that blossomed as organically as nature did. Nolde’s first important pictures date from 1906 and depict the flowers and garden motifs that he had been magnetically drawn to when living…

Emil Nolde: Blumenstilleben mit orchideen

Hear More Hauser At Sunnyside Petrit Ceku At Sunnyside Read More Emil Nolde at wikiwand See More Emil Nolde At Sunnyside Emil Nolde at Christie’s Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Franz Marc: The Little Mountain Goats

Hear More Hauser At Sunnyside See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc Museum website Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

August Macke: Marienkirche

Read More August Macke at wikiwand (it is a sad story) Der Blaue Reiter at wikiwand See More Der Blaue Reiter At Sunnyside Expressionism At Sunnyside August Macke House Museum August Macke – sold lots at Christie’s Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Emil Nolde: Blumen

Emil Nolde (born Hans Emil Hansen; 7 August 1867 – 13 April 1956) was a German-Danish painter and printmaker. He was one of the first Expressionists, a member of Die Brücke, and was one of the first oil painting and watercolor painters of the early 20th century to explore color. He is known for his…

August Macke: Schlucht in Tegernsee

Read More August Macke at wikiwand (it is a sad story) Der Blaue Reiter at wikiwand See More August Macke House Museum August Macke – sold lots at Christie’s Der Blaue Reiter At Sunnyside Expressionism At Sunnyside Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Teasdale, Tin, and Memley: There Will Come Soft Rain, Part II

“There Will Come Soft Rains” by Sara Teasdale There will come soft rains and the smell of the ground, And swallows circling with their shimmering sound; And frogs in the pools singing at night, And wild plum-trees in tremulous white; Robins will wear their feathery fire Whistling their whims on a low fence-wire; And not…

Emil Nolde: Sonnenuntergang

“Painted in 1909, Sonnenuntergang (Sunset) is one of the earliest of Nolde’s celebrated seascapes… For Nolde, who grew up on the coast and was to spend almost all his life near the ocean, the sea was an imposing and powerful presence, an elemental force of nature that was an important and recurrent feature of both…

Franz Marc: The Dream (1912)

“…the allegory represented by The Dream is not overly explicit. As Klaus Lankheit suggests, it is more of a poetic image without any rational meaning. The scene takes place in the middle of the night, as indicated by the marked blackness of the background sky. The yellow house on the left may symbolise the real…

Bomsori and Blechacz: La fille aux cheveux de lin (Debussy)

Hear More Claude Debussy At Sunnyside Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at The Art Story Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc Museum website See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Mozart: Quintet for Piano and Winds in E flat Major, KV 452

Hear More Mozart At Sunnyside Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc Museum website See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Eleanor Farjeon: People Look East

People, Look East Words and Music: Eleanor Farjeon (1881-1965), 1928 1. People, look east. The time is near Of the crowning of the year. Make your house fair as you are able, Trim the hearth and set the table. People, look east and sing today: Love, the guest, is on the way. 2. Furrows, be…

Ray Charles: Oh, Happy Day!

Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc Museum website See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Happy Friday! 🙂 ~Sunnyside

Teasdale, Tin, and Memley: There Will Come Soft Rain, Part I

“There Will Come Soft Rains” by Sara Teasdale There will come soft rains and the smell of the ground, And swallows circling with their shimmering sound; And frogs in the pools singing at night, And wild plum-trees in tremulous white; Robins will wear their feathery fire Whistling their whims on a low fence-wire; And not…

Emil Nolde: Blühender Sommer

Read More Emil Nolde at wikiwand See More Emil Nolde At Sunnyside Emil Nolde at Christie’s Happy Friday 🌻 ~Sunnyside

New Dawn, New Day, New Life

“…It’s a new dawn, it’s a new day, it’s a new life for me Yeah, it’s a new dawn, it’s a new day, it’s a new life for me…” Hear More Sam Robson At Sunnyside Sam Robson Website See More Max Pechstein at Christie’s Max Pechstein at Artcyclopedia Learn More Max Pechstein at wikiwand Official…

Max Pechstein: Herbstabend (1927)

“In Herbstabend we witness the evolution of Pechstein’s artistic metier; despite remarkable aesthetic consistencies with Expressionism, the powerful substitution of pastoral figures with the symbol of the home implies a profound domestication. At this point in his life, Pechstein clearly enjoyed a socioeconomic security that informed the new, calmer landscape evident here. Unfortunately this tranquility…

Franz Marc: Birds

Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc Museum website See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Franz Marc: The Foxes

Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc Museum website Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Franz Marc: Blue Horse I

See More Franz Marc At Sunnyside Read More Franz Marc at wikiwand Franz Marc at Art Story Franz Marc Museum website Franz Marc’s artist page at Guggenheim Franz Marc: The Painter Who Loved Horses Thanks for Visiting 🌻 ~Sunnyside

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner: Mountain Landscape from Clavadel (1925–26)

Switzerland: Kirchner’s Later Years William Cook in The Spectator comments, “Here in rural Graubünden, he couldn’t help but lead a healthier life. This dramatic change of scene was reflected in his art. His emotive use of colour was as revolutionary as ever, but painting landscapes instead of cityscapes meant that the effect was entirely different….

Ernst Ludwig Kirchner: Gut Staberhof III (1913)

The Truth, … and Nothing But the Truth I’ll be honest. Many of Ernst Kirchner’s works are….. not my favorites. (There. I said it.) This painting, however, caught my eye immediately because of the colors. A pink street? What is that all about? I looked more closely. The trees are full of texture and movement,…