It’s a compelling classic: In Caspar David Friedrich’s The Wanderer Above the Fog (1818), a lone man on a rock gazes out over range of mountains half-blanketed in fog, his back to the viewer. His hair ...
“He brings in that random, specific, accidental character of the world, and then he makes it feel like there’s some kind of order to it,” says Friedrich expert Joseph Leo Koerner. Caspar David ...
Caspar David Friedrich is considered one of the most important German painters, and his landscape works live large in the cultural consciousness in Germany and beyond. You have probably seen the ...
The exhibition “Caspar David Friedrich: The Soul of Nature” will run at the Metropolitan Museum of Art through May 11. After a long day of hiking, you’ve finally reached the top of the mountain. Tired ...
Caspar David Friedrich, "Wanderer above the Sea of Fog" (c. 1817) (photo by Elke Walford, courtesy the Metropolitan Museum of Art) Are we having a Romantic moment? As reactionary winds lash about the ...
BERLINBERLIN — A major show of Caspar David Friedrich’s iconic landscapes that marks the 250th anniversary of his birth is opening in Berlin, where he made his breakthrough and where a 1906 exhibition ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Two employees of the Alte Nationalgalerie hang the painting "The Sea of Ice" by Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840) on the wall of ...
I went to the Met to take in the landscapes. I didn’t expect to find an old friend. “Caspar David Friedrich: The Soul of Nature” arrived at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York this winter after ...
A Not-So-Faithful Portrayal of the Women of the Bible Risotto for the Masses Shouting into the Social-Media Ether Truck-Driver Artist Takes On New York, Italy Buys a Hidden Caravaggio, and Meryl ...
Editor’s Note: This article is a review and includes subjective thoughts, opinions and critiques. Caspar David Friedrich’s “Moonrise by the Sea” (1822) is one of those paintings that stay with you ...
A solitary crucifix rises out of a cleft of rock. Fir trees take the place of the two thieves traditionally positioned on either side. The tip of the cross and the tops of the trees touch the sky, a ...