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  1. 27. Mai 2024 · Germany in the 1920s and 1930s mixed post-WWI trauma and economic strife with emancipation, emotional release and hope. Those two decades also saw the rise of New Objectivity in German art: the topic of the Leopold Museum’s Splendor and Misery exhibition. Around 150 works; A return to reality in all its facets; Intriguing look into ...

  2. 20. Mai 2024 · The New Objectivity (or The Matter-of-Factness as it is sometimes translated) focused on the matter, the object, something real and specific — unlike Expressionism, which was obsessed with creating a new reality out of the artist’s emotions and inner experiences.

  3. 14. Mai 2024 · Disillusioned by war, a group of artists embodying Neue Sachlichkeit, or New Objectivity in English, mercilessly held a mirror up to life in Weimar society in highly naturalistic and caustically satirical paintings that reflected the political turmoil of life.

  4. 16. Mai 2024 · New Objectivity Painting and the Weimar Republic's Modernity Crisis, in: Reinterpreting the Past. Traditionalist Artistic Trends in Central and Eastern Europe of the 1920s and 1930s, ed. by Irena Kossowska, Warsaw 2010, S. 47-64.

  5. 17. Mai 2024 · The term ‘New Objectivity’ was coined to describe the movement by the art historian Gustav Friedrich Hartlaud in 1925, and its key exponents, such as Max Beckmann and Otto Dix, are the focus of this show at the Leopold Museum. Some 150 works, including satirical illustrations of politicans and paintings of everyday life, provided ...

  6. Vor 3 Tagen · Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel [a] (27 August 1770 – 14 November 1831) was a German philosopher and one of the most influential figures of German idealism and 19th-century philosophy.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › NewsNews - Wikipedia

    Vor einem Tag · Meaning Etymology The English word "news" developed in the 14th century as a special use of the plural form of "new". In Middle English, the equivalent word was newes, like the French nouvelles and the German Neues. Similar developments are found in the Slavic languages – namely cognates from Serbo-Croatian novost (from nov, "new"), Czech and Slovak noviny (from nový, "new"), the Polish ...