Chalk Cliffs on Rügen by Caspar David Friedrich - 1818 - 90 x 70 cm Kunst Museum Winterthur Chalk Cliffs on Rügen by Caspar David Friedrich - 1818 - 90 x 70 cm Kunst Museum Winterthur

Chalk Cliffs on Rügen

oil on canvas • 90 x 70 cm
  • Caspar David Friedrich - 5 September 1774 - 7 May 1840 Caspar David Friedrich 1818

Caspar David Friedrich is the most important representative of early German Romanticism. Born in a small town next to the Baltic Sea, he was very familiar with the rough nature of northern Germany and the nearby island of Rügen with its famous cliffs. Even after moving to Dresden in 1798, he often returned here.

In 1808, his painting Cross in the Mountains caused a polemic in Dresden. Instead of a traditional religious painting, he presented a landscape, thus provoking an unprecedented dispute in Germany about what a work of art is and what is has to depict. By representing the divine through nature itself, Friedrich transcended the established separation of pictorial genres and created a manifest of the Romantic feeling for nature.

This can also be sensed in Chalk Cliffs on Rügen. It was painted in the year of his marriage to Caroline Bommer, shortly after the honeymoon, which was undertaken together with his brother. This circumstance suggests a possible identification of the three figures on the painting. They correspond with the three boats, often interpreted as life vessels, and of which the last one is recognizable only as a tiny dot of paint on the horizon. Also, the image itself is divided in three parts: the green foreground, occupied by humans and plants, could stand for life. The middle ground with its dangerous, bright-white cliffs, represents death. And the sea merging with the sky could signify the infinite, the divine.

With its almost completely abandoned spatial depth and its flat strictness, the work is one of Friedrich’s most radical compositions. At the same time, it belongs to the most colorful and most festive paintings of this deeply melancholic painter. We present this amazing painting thanks to the Kunst Museum Winterthur.

With this very thought-inspiring painting we want to continue our celebrations of DailyArt's 8th birthday!  : )  So, don't miss our special features on DailyArt Magazine and in our social media (InstagramTwitter, and Facebook). Today we have a deal for you: DailyArt PRO today will cost $2.99 instead of the usual $5.99. Just tap the Upgrade to PRO button and enjoy full access to our Archive, your Favorites, and Search, and get rid of ads forever!  : )

P.S. Here you will find six shades of romantic creepiness of Caspar David Friedrich’s paintings!