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Max Ernst
Description
- Max Ernst
- Tremblement de Terre
- Signed max ernst and dated 25 (lower right); signed max ernst, titled and dated 25 on the stretcher
- Oil on canvas
- 23 5/8 by 29 in.
- 60 by 73.5 cm
Provenance
Der Sturm Gallery, Berlin
Private Collection
Galerie Cazeau-Béraudière, Paris
Acquired from the above
Condition
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Catalogue Note
Executed in the mid-1920s, the present work belongs to one of the most creative periods in Max Ernst's oeuvre, marked by a constant stream of technical experimentation and invention. It was during these years that the artist established his personal mythology, his visual universe of themes and images that were to become central to his entire career. One of Ernst's key subjects was geology and nature, and it was in this series of paintings of the 1920s that Ernst for the first time fully explored his newly developed grattage technique, as employed so effectively in the present work. His experimentations with ways of applying pigment onto the surface resulted in the discovery of frottage in 1925. Fascinated by the rich texture of the floorboards, he would place sheets of paper onto their surface and rub over them with graphit🍨e. This would result in various relief-like forms that suggested particular images to the artist, and with a few stroke൩s added by hand he would arrive at fantastic, unexpected compositions.
Adapting this technique to the medium of oil painting, Ernst would cover the canvas with layers of paint and place it over an uneven surface or an object. He would then scrape the pigment off the surface, and complex patterns would emerge. Discussing this grattage technique, Werner Spies wrote: "Max Ernst laid his canvas over various objects with raised textures – pieces of wood and string, grates, textured glass panes – and, drawing the paint over them with a palette knife, brought forth the most vivid effects. In the course of the following years – years which William Rubin has called the 'heroic epoch of Surrealist painting' – this technique, known as grattage, led to astonishingly innovative imagery. The pictures became more abstract in effect, their formats larger. The dramatic force of these paintings, the richness of their scintillating colour, made them high points of imaginative Surrealist art in the late 1920s" (W. Spies, Max Ernst. A Retrospective (exhibition catalogue), Ta✱te Gallery, London, 199✱1, p. 148).