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Her
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Caspar David Friedrich was an outstanding 19th-century German romantic painter whose
awesome landscapes and seascapes are not only meticulous observations of nature but are also
allegories.
Friedrich was born on September 5, 1774, in Greifswald and studied at the Copenhagen
Academy. In 1798 he settled in Dresden, where he became a member of an artistic and literary
circle imbued with the ideals of the romantic movement. His early drawings—precisely outlinedin pencil or sepia—explored motifs recurrent throughout his work: rocky
beaches, flat, barren plains, infinite mountain ranges, and trees reaching toward the sky. Later, his work began to
reflect more of his emotional response to natural scenery.
He began to paint in oils in 1807; one of his first canvases, The Cross in the Mountains (1807?,
Staatliche Kunstsamm-lungen, Dresden), is representative of his mature style. A bold break
from traditional religious painting, this work is almost pure landscape; the figure of the crucified
Christ, seen from behind and silhouetted against a mountain sunset, is almost lost in the natural
setting. According to Friedrich's own writings, all the elements in the composition have symbolic
meanings. The mountains are allegories of faith; the rays of the setting sun symbolize the end of
the pre-Christian world; and the fir trees stand for hope. Friedrich's cold, acid
colors, clear lighting, and sharp contours heighten the feeling of melancholy, isolation, and human
powerlessness against the ominous forces of nature expressed in his paintings. As a faculty
member of the Dresden Academy, Friedrich influenced later German romantic painters.
Although his reputation declined after his death, 20th-century viewers are fascinated by his
imagery.
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