
Seeking Revelation: German Romantic Prints and Drawings
Carl Wilhelm Kolbe the Elder, Johann Christian Clausen Dahl, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, Ferdinand Ruscheweyh, Peter von Cornelius, Joseph Anton Koch, Ferdinand Olivier, Adolph Kunike, Franz Kobell, Philipp Otto Runge, Johann Adolph Darnstedt, Ephraim Gottlieb Krüger, Friedrich Christoph Perthes, Hans Jakob Oeri, Johann Friedrich Overbeck, Johann Velten, Carl Friedrich Lessing, Johann Wilhelm Schirmer, Caspar David Friedrich, Christian Friedrich, Johann Gottlieb Seyfert, Franz Ittenbach
Milwaukee Art Museum
700 N Art Museum Dr, Milwaukee, WI 53202
10am-5pm
Admission
Paid Admission
Free for Members; Included with admission
About
During the German Romantic movement, active from about 1770 to 1850, many artists hoped to gain a deeper understanding of universal questions. They experienced the French Revolution, France's invasion of Germany during the Napoleonic Wars (1803–1815), and a shift from the Enlightenment's emphasis on reason to more interest in emotion and feeling. Decades of changing borders and values led artists to reconsider their national identity and sense of self, as well as their relationship to nature and the divine. Featuring 84 drawings, prints, and paintings that highlight the Milwaukee Art Museum's German Romantic collection—one of the strongest in the country—the exhibition examines how artists attempted to comprehend and shape their world. They looked to the sublime beauty of the landscape, religious devotion, and travel to help them respond to the urgent issues of their time. Ultimately, even when it did not uncover answers, the process of seeking offered its own reward. The Romantics' approach offers an example we can follow today as we live through our own unpredictable moment in history.