2010
130.0 x 130.0 cm从与原作比例一致的预设尺寸中进行选择。
您可以输入自定义尺寸,以适配特定的画框或空间。如果您选择的尺寸与原图比例不符,我们将对作品进行裁剪,或通过镜像填充/纯色填充边缘的方式来扩展图像。在开始制作之前,我们会向您发送一份数字效果图供您确认。
请注意,屏幕上的预览并不能反映实际的裁剪或扩展效果。只有效果图才能准确展示最终的构图。
虽然我们提供定制尺寸,但为了保持原图比例,我们建议您从预设列表中选择尺寸。
Clandestine Light
复制品尺寸
Born in Donaueschingen, Baden-Württemberg, Germany, on March 8, 1945, Anselm Kiefer’s life and art are inextricably linked to the weighty history of his nation. Raised near the Rhine River in the Black Forest, he was named after the classical painter Anselm Feuerbach – a deliberate homage that foreshadowed his lifelong engagement with German culture, myth, and its often-troubled past. From childhood, Kiefer envisioned himself as an artist, a pursuit fueled by a deep sense of responsibility to confront the complexities of Germany’s recent history and grapple with its legacy.
Kiefer's artistic journey began formally at the University of Freiburg and later at the Karlsruhe Academy of Art, but his most formative influence came from informal study with Joseph Beuys in Düsseldorf during the early 1970s. This period proved crucial, exposing him to a radical approach to artmaking that prioritized process and material as integral components of meaning. He spent years experimenting with various techniques – straw, ash, clay, lead, shellac – materials he would later incorporate into his monumental works, creating textures and surfaces that mirrored the weight and density of history itself. Before settling in Barjac, in the Languedoc region of southern France, Kiefer honed his craft in a converted brick factory in Buchen and more recently in Paris, establishing himself as one of Germany’s most significant contemporary artists.
Kiefer's work is profoundly shaped by a preoccupation with German history – not simply recounting events, but excavating their emotional resonance. He draws heavily from sources such as Wagnerian opera cycles, Goethe’s poetry, and the mythical figure of Barbarossa (Frederick I), exploring how these cultural touchstones were manipulated and distorted during the Third Reich's propaganda campaigns. As Andreas Huyssen observed in 1992, Kiefer’s Germanness functioned differently in America than it did in Germany; while Americans often viewed him as a lone figure battling against the repression of German fascism, within Germany, his work was seen as confronting the difficult process of *Vergangenheitsbewältigung* – coming to terms with the past.
The influence of Paul Celan’s poetry is particularly evident in Kiefer's exploration of trauma and loss. His 1969 photographic self-portraits, titled *Occupations*, were a deliberately provocative gesture, depicting himself dressed as a paramilitary figure mimicking Hitler in various landscapes – from the sea to monumental settings. This series wasn’t merely an act of confrontation but layered with complex meanings; one image, photographed from behind against the backdrop of the sea, echoes the Romantic wanderer paintings of Caspar David Friedrich, creating a dialogue between past and present, history and memory. Kiefer's approach is fundamentally rooted in the invocation, restaging, or excavation of history – an active engagement rather than passive observation.
Kiefer’s artistic process is characterized by its physicality and deliberate slowness. He often employs techniques that seem deliberately laborious, mirroring the arduous task of confronting a painful past. He frequently builds up layers of materials – straw, ash, clay – creating textured surfaces that resemble scorched earth or crumbling ruins. The use of lead, in particular, carries symbolic weight, representing both the destructive power of war and the burden of guilt. Kiefer’s works are rarely finished in the conventional sense; they are often left unfinished, retaining traces of his process—scratches, smudges, and imperfections – which serve to emphasize the ongoing nature of historical inquiry.
Among Kiefer's most significant works are *Margarete*, inspired by Celan’s poem “Todesfuge,” a haunting exploration of death and memory; *Thetha*, a massive, earth-covered canvas that evokes the devastation of war; and his numerous paintings depicting historical figures and events. His work has been exhibited extensively worldwide, earning him critical acclaim and establishing him as a leading figure in Neo-Expressionism. Kiefer’s willingness to engage with taboo subjects—the Holocaust, German nationalism, and the complexities of national identity—has made him one of the most important artists of his generation, prompting viewers to confront uncomfortable truths about their own histories and cultures. He continues to work today, shaping our understanding of Germany's past and its enduring relevance in the present.
1945 - 2015 , Turkey
向我们介绍您的项目需求,我们的艺术专家将为您提供 3 个个性化的艺术品推荐。
由我们的专家为您精选 3 款心仪之作 —— 完全免费!