May 1, 2026

"In contrast to the refined intellectualism and impersonal aesthetic of artists like Sol LeWitt and Donald Judd, he offered an art that reveled in raw emotion, extroverted brushwork..."

"... and a fierce engagement with the complexities of 20th-century German history.... Mr. Baselitz’s 'Hero' series of 1965 and 1966 — blocky figures in thick impasto stumbling through tormented landscapes — plunged the viewer into a nightmare vision of postwar Germany. No less disturbing were the woodsmen, hunters and cows of the 'Fracture' series, disassembled into horizontal strips and merged with the landscape. In a break with convention, Mr. Baselitz began turning the central images in his canvases upside down in the late 1960s.... 'The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in,' Mr. Baselitz told the critic and historian Walter Grasskamp in 1984."

From "Georg Baselitz, German Neo-Expressionist Painter, Dies at 88/Along with contemporaries like Anselm Kiefer, he mounted a frontal attack on Minimalism and Conceptualism, the dominant 'cool' styles of the 1970s" (NYT).

Here's an example from the "Hero" series 


I wish Baselitz could have done the official portrait for... various political figures. But I will not say who because I'm chilled by the arrest of James Comey.

And here's an example from the "Fractures" series, totally inappropriate for an official portrait:


IN THE COMMENTS: john mosby quoted the bit about "the sky is at the top and the ground down below" being "only an agreement" and "one that we absolutely do not have to believe in" and suggested "Prof, you could put this principle to work with your sunrise pics!"

Good idea:

IMG_6988

IMG_6998

43 comments:

john mosby said...

"'The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in"

Prof, you could put this principle to work with your sunrise pics! CC, JSM

rehajm said...

I wish he could have done the official portrait for... various political figures. But I'd better not say who because I'm chilled by the arrest of James Comey

…you certainly appreciate asymmetry- political as well as aesthetic…

MadTownGuy said...

"...Mr. Baselitz began turning the central images in his canvases upside down in the late 1960s.... 'The hierarchy where the sky is at the top and the ground down below is in any case only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in.' "

Gravity denial. Poor choice. As he just found out, gravity wins.

Aggie said...

I noticed the kerfuffle about the 'Nazi salutes' that some saw in his art, but that he insisted were rooted in African culture.

In the middle of the story, an inset: ..."How The Times decides who gets an obituary. There is no formula, scoring system or checklist in determining the news value of a life. We investigate, research and ask around before settling on our subjects. If you know of someone who might be a candidate for a Times obituary, please suggest it here...."

Why is the self-proclaimed standard-bearer explaining itself?

Archived here: https://archive.ph/GYv6I#selection-4751.0-4757.1

rehajm said...

I wish Baselitz could have done the official portrait for... various political figures

…artists are notoriously ignorant of politics, economics, diplomacy…most important but necessary things humanity needs to exist and flourish. Any expression of political figures is and would be boring, uninspiring. We all know who they would choose to glorify and who they would ridicule…

R C Belaire said...

AA : "...I'm chilled by the arrest of James Comey." You can simply put a sweater on and feel the warmth wash over you.

narciso said...

Bsd acid trip, looks as bad as baihaus

boatbuilder said...

I thought you were opposed to sarcasm.

Ampersand said...

That indictment is about to be bounced out of court.

Peachy said...

Is that Comey on the bottom?

narciso said...

This was in the time of adenauers economic miracle

narciso said...

It looks like an absolut horror people pay for this

narciso said...
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Peachy said...

Thousands of Trump haters want Trump dead. and say so. No one is coming after them - as they march openly with their No Kings rally.
They killed Charlie Kirk - for his speech.

That the former head of the FBI is allowed to say it? Really?

of course - I think the head of the snake corrupt left deserve an ocean of comeuppance and karma/justice.

Peachy said...
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Just an old country lawyer said...

I'm sorry, but that's some ugly shit. Why was he an important artist? Why are we talking about J. Comey's shell art in the same thread?

narciso said...

Guernica was over the top, but that was actually about a tragic mistake

gspencer said...

Huh?

You put up a post about this guy?

Peachy said...

Art that reminds me of the bottom of a dumpster. pass.

Peachy said...

"I'm sorry, but that's some ugly shit."

No need to say sorry. It is some ugly shit.

rehajm said...

That indictment is about to be bounced out of court.

..yes it is. Ann should stay in bed with the covers over her head until Comey is free then she can get up and peacock around cawing ‘free speech!’ just like Jim will be doing…or at least she can do that in between moderating comments in the comment section

Peachy said...

Think of it as arresting OJ Simpson on a technicality.

Ann Althouse said...

The hierarchy where beautiful is elevated above ugliness is only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in.

rehajm said...

…oh yah, we got Al Capone on tax evasion. High level government employees are governed by plenty of you-must always/never-type contradictory rules and laws so I’m sure there’s one in there where they can Clintontwist the language to send Comey to the chair. Ballsy

Known Unknown said...

I like it. I like the energy in the brush strokes and the color.

Krumhorn said...

There are some who want us to think that way about fatties.

- Krumhorn

Ficta said...

"Anthony Blunt: Portrait painters tend to regard faces as not very still lives. There was one eminent portrait painter who said he wished he could hang his sitters upside down by the leg like a dead hare.

Queen Elizabeth II: Yes. Well, one Minister of the Arts wanted to loose Francis Bacon on me, and that’s probably how I would have ended up. He did the Screaming Pope, didn’t he? I suppose I would have been the Screaming Queen."
-- A Question of Attribution by Alan Bennett

narciso said...

The soviet spy who leaked market garden to the germans

narciso said...
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RCOCEAN II said...

I'd put this guy in the category of..."Interesting". Which is not the same as "Good" let alone "great". But you know if cant be Good, be different. Water rising to its own level.

Viewing beauty over ugly as an agreed upon idea, is I suppose correct. Its not like you can prove it by the scientific method. Music, art, taste in food and the opposite sex is all a matter of taste.

But I dont think many people would pay me to model their clothes or appear in a movie or listen to me Tinkle out Mary had a little lamb vs. Beethoven's fifth. Beauty sells. Ugly doesn't.

Lazarus said...

Germans just can't let go of expressionism. Baselitz paintings, though, would benefit from putting more actual fat, felt, and fur on the canvas.

Judd's boxes may be impersonal, but does that make them intellectual? Maybe the dude just liked boxes without thinking much about it. Maybe his love for them was really a personal thing. Maybe his work was governed by craftsmanship more than by anything like an idea. In other words, is the absence of strong emotions what makes something intellectual or is an engagement with ideas necessary?

n.n said...

Transmutation.

Nancy said...

I like Ivan Albright.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivan_Albright#/media/File%3A%E2%80%9CSelf-Portrait%E2%80%9D_by_Ivan_Albright_(1897%E2%80%931983)%2C_1934%2C_oil_on_canvas%2C_291%E2%81%844_by_191%E2%81%844_inches._Collection_of_New_Trier_High_School_District_203.png

Iman said...

“But I will not say who because I'm chilled by the arrest of James Comey.”

I’m chillin’ while I sit ‘n’ hope he gets held accountable.

Unknown said...

Comey's indictment is wrong. Should have been for High Treason.

Josephbleau said...

So my interpretation of the second picture is, a girl looks backwards to observe herself being sexually assaulted by a manatee.

Josephbleau said...

“ The hierarchy where beautiful is elevated above ugliness is only an agreement, one we have all got used to, but one that we absolutely do not have to believe in.”

No it’s a universal evolutionary strategy that groups fitness as beauty and favors it in sexual reproduction.

Josephbleau said...

Beauty approximates the characteristics that make a species survive.

Iman said...

Personally, I’m chilled by the number of Commies out on the streets of America… openly celebrating their Commie holiday with their usual bitching/moaning.

narciso said...

Revolted by rancid buttermilk

RJ said...

I do not understand why people who may be capable of creating beautiful things choose to make ugly things instead. (I have no idea if this artist can in fact make beautiful things based on the images shown.)

Lazarus said...

When you find one rotten crumpled up potato at the bottom of an old sack it looks a lot like the second painting.

Lazarus said...

"Perfect" societies and well-working "utopias" drive people crazy. Maybe it's like that with beauty and artists.

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