Decadence and dark dreams.
Belgian Symbolism September 18, 2020 - January 17, 2021
Alte Nationalgalerie

Duration September 18, 2020 - January 17, 2021

Location: Old National Gallery

Website www.belgischersymbolismusinberlin.de

An exhibition by the Nationalgalerie, Berlin State Museums, with the support of the Royal Belgian Art Museums, made possible by the Friends of the Nationalgalerie.

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[photo_subtitle subtitle=“Fernand Khnopff, Caresses (Des Caresses), 1896 | Oil on canvas, 50 × 150 cm | © Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels" img="https://freunde-der-nationalgalerie.de/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/BS_Khnopff_DesCaresses_klein.jpg"][photo_subtitle subtitle="Jean Delville, Portrait of Madame Stuart Merill / Mysteriosa | Chalk, pastel, and colored pencil on paper, 40 x 32.1 cm | Musées royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels © RMFAB, Brussels, Photo: J. Geleyns - Art Photography" img="https://freunde-der-nationalgalerie.de/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/BS_Presse_DelvilleMadameStuartMerill_klein .jpg"][photo_subtitle subtitle="James Ensor, The Painting Skeleton, 1896 | Oil on wood, 37.3 x 45.3 cm | Royal Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp © Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp" img="https://freunde-der-nationalgalerie.de/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/BS_Presse_EnsorMalendesSkelett_klein.jpg"]

The lustful gaze into the abyss, the exaggerated aestheticism of an oversaturated society that at the same time believed itself to be in crisis, the morbid charm between Thanatos and Eros - these are thematic areas in art that found expression particularly in Belgian symbolism at the end of the 19th century. Against the development of the surface appeal of naturalism and impressionism, a new art movement emerged in the 1880s, the hallmarks of which were sensuality, magic, profound meaning as well as irrationality. Symbolism often contains an artistic anticipation of the interpretation of dreams by Freud, whose study of the same name appeared in 1899.

The specific feature of Belgian symbolism is a preference for morbid and decadent motifs. Already around the middle of the century, with Antoine Wiertz, death and decay became leitmotifs in art, which can be traced back to sculptors such as George Minne and the master of the absurd James Ensor. Inspired by contemporary literature, artists around 1900 tried to combine a new mysticism with an extravagant and precious style, as Charles van der Stappen achieved in his sculpture by combining noble materials. In this context, the femme fatale becomes the central figure as an expression of abundance and lust, for example in the work of Fernand Khnopff. With Felicien Rops and Jean Delville, the aspect of the esoteric and demonic is added here. Symbolism not only influenced portraits and figures, but was also reflected as a paysage symbolist in the landscape paintings of William Degouve de Nuncques and Fernand Khnopff, as well as in the eerie interiors of Leon Spilliaert, Xavier Mellery and Georges Lebrun.

While Impressionism has been researched and appreciated today in almost all its facets and in the respective country-specific characteristics, a differentiated examination of symbolism is still missing today. In addition to French Symbolism, which is seen as the origin and inspiration of similar efforts in Germany, the development of this art movement in Belgium has so far been less of a focus of interest. This is wrong, because many of the impulses for Symbolism came from here: the successful and influential writers in Paris such as Maurice Maeterlinck and Georges Rodenbach came here, while Brussels was also the European hub for exhibitions of a wide variety of art styles and was involved in the establishment and spread of Symbolism had a high share. In many areas, Belgium acted as a hinge between England and the continent, and the Paris-Brussels axis was particularly close. With Les Vingt, the salon for contemporary Belgian and international art, a new stage was offered in Brussels between 1883 and 1893, which included, among others, the Belgians Ensor, Khnopff, Rysselberghe with artists as diverse as Cezanne, Crane, Gauguin, Seurat, van Gogh , Klimt and Mc Neill Whistler brought together.

The exhibition aims to present this spectrum of previously little-known Belgian positions to a broad audience as an important reference for European symbolism from Moreau to Böcklin to Klimt and Munch.

Boris Hohmeyer reported in advance about the exhibition in the May issue of art – The art magazine Read the article here .