Städel Museum
Max Beckmann's work emerged in a world marked by crises and upheavals, transforming these experiences into a visual language that continues to fascinate today. His drawings form the most intimate part of his oeuvre: like a diary, they document Beckmann's artistic development and simultaneously served as a medium for observation, image-finding, and even image-invention. The Städel Museum now focuses on these works, presenting around 80 pieces from all phases of his career—from previously little-known drawings to outstanding masterpieces. They offer direct and profound access to Beckmann (1884–1950), one of the most important artists of the modern era.
The Städel Museum possesses one of the world's most outstanding collections of Beckmann's work and has dedicated itself to collecting, researching, and presenting his oeuvre for more than a century. In 2021, the museum received a remarkable boost through important long-term loans from the collection of Karin and Rüdiger Volhard. This, along with the publication by Hirmer Verlag of the three-volume catalogue raisonné of Max Beckmann's black-and-white drawings—with which Hedda Finke and Stephan von Wiese have filled one of the last major gaps in research on Beckmann's drawings—provides the impetus for this retrospective exhibition.
The core of the exhibition consists of drawings from the Städel Museum's own collection, supplemented by loans from renowned international museums and private collections, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the British Museum in London, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Kunstmuseum Basel, the Hamburger Kunsthalle, the Kupferstichkabinett (Museum of Prints and Drawings) of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin (National Museums in Berlin), and the Museum der bildenden Künste Leipzig (Museum of Fine Arts Leipzig). Individual paintings and prints also offer insights into Beckmann's working process and the interplay of different media.
Philipp Demandt, Director of the Städel Museum, on the exhibition:
“Max Beckmann, the Städel Museum, and the city of Frankfurt am Main have been closely linked for over a century. Despite the loss of almost all of the artist's works during the Nazi era, the museum today possesses a Beckmann collection of international standing. With the current exhibition, we are once again focusing specifically on Beckmann's drawings for the first time in over forty years. They open up a unique and fascinating cosmos of his work and make his artistic development directly tangible – not least thanks to the outstanding collaboration with Hedda Finke and Stephan von Wiese, the editors of the three-volume catalogue raisonné of his drawings.”
Curators Regina Freyberger, head of the Graphic Collection from 1800 onwards at the Städel Museum, Hedda Finke and Stephan von Wiese, authors of the three-volume catalogue raisonné of Beckmann's drawings, add:
“The drawings are a key to Beckmann's work. Through drawing, he developed his distinctive visual language, captured what he saw and experienced, shaped his personal worldview, and transformed fleeting impressions into multifaceted, meaningful compositions. Over the course of his life, he produced more than 1,900 black-and-white drawings in pen, chalk, or pencil—not bound in sketchbooks—ranging from quick sketches to fully realized works. The exhibition presents a focused yet representative selection of these, which—supplemented by individual color works, prints, and paintings—makes the draftsman Max Beckmann vividly accessible.”
IMAGES

Max Beckmann, Self-Portrait, 1912

Max Beckmann, Evening Street Scene, 1913 (?)

Max Beckmann, Prof. Ferdinand Sauerbruch, 1915

Max Beckmann, Wounded Soldier with Bandaged Head, 1915

Max Beckmann, Self-Portrait While Drawing, 1915

Max Beckmann, Rimini, 1927

Max Beckmann, Flooded City, ca. 1928 (?)

Max Beckmann, Quappi with Candle, 1928

Max Beckmann, The Murder, 1933

Max Beckmann, Faust II, sheet 4, Faust: Our life’s a spectrumsheen of borrowed glory, 1943

Max Beckmann, Tram Stop, 1945

Max Beckmann, Champagne Fantasy (Magnifying Glass), 1945

Max Beckmann, Rodeo, 1949

Max Beckmann, Self-portrait with Fish, 1949

Max Beckmann, Portrait of Georg Swarzenski, 1950




