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ONLINECOLLECTION

Study for Factory in Berlin, c. 1921

Leopold Museum,
Vienna © Herbert Boeckl estate,
Vienna
India ink on paper
51.8×40.2 cm

Artists

  • Herbert Boeckl

    (Klagenfurt 1894–1966 Vienna)

Unfortunately not on display at the moment
As a painter, Herbert Boeckl (1894–1966) is an autodidact. He focuses fully on his calling only after the end of World War I. The Secessionist influences that mark his early works are soon discarded and he begins to attach greater importance to colors than to lines. His first important Expressionist works with strong abstracting tendencies are created as early as 1919. Color, applied in a pastose and expressive style, becomes the decisive factor in the years of 1921 to 1923. These eruptions are smoothed again in Berlin. His study trip to Berlin (1921/22) was made possible by his promoter, the Viennese art dealer Gustav Nebehay (1881–1935). The promising artist received a fixed monthly payment from Nebehay. In return, all works were the property of the gallery owner, who granted the artist a share in the sales. Six paintings were created during the artist’s time in Berlin, including the Factory in Berlin. The Berlin paintings are often seen as foreshadowing Boeckl’s later works.

Object data

Artist/author
  • Herbert Boeckl
Title
Study for Factory in Berlin
Date
c. 1921
Art movement
Expressionism
Category
Graphic work
Material​/technique
India ink on paper
Dimensions
51.8×40.2 cm
Credit line
Leopold Museum, Vienna, Inv. 1261
Inventory access
Contributed to the Leopold Museum-Privatstiftung in 1994
Keywords

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Provenance

Provenance research
Leopold Museum i

Nachlass Herbert Boeckl, Wien (1966);
Leopold Boeckl, Wien (o.D.);
Dr. Rudolf Leopold, Wien (1978-1994); (1)
Leopold Museum-Privatstiftung, Wien (1994).

  1. Kaufvertrag vom 24.07.1978

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