Coverbild Lovis Corinth. Then came Berlin!
Lovis Corinth. Then came Berlin!
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Edited by: Thomas Köhler, Stefanie Heckmann, Janina Nentwig
Designed by: Gregor Schreiter
Artist: Lovis Corinth
Texts by: Sven Haase, Johanna Haug, Stefanie Heckmann, Thomas Köhler, Janina Nentwig, Peter W. Marx, Andreas Schalhorn
Englisch
October 2026, 272 Pages , 250 Photos
Hardcover
217mm x 280mm
ISBN:978-3-7757-6348-6

HATJE CANTZ VERLAG
Mommsenstraße 27
10629 Berlin
Germany
E-Mail: contact@hatjecantz.de

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A Leading Painter of the Early 20th Century
The significance of Lovis Corinth (1858–1925) for Modernism can hardly be overstated. Even during his lifetime, the painter was among the most prominent figures in the Berlin art scene. Born and raised in Tapiau, East Prussia, he moved from Munich to the imperial capital in 1900. At that time, Berlin was already significantly more progressive than the Bavarian residence city. Corinth is said to have commented on his success story on the Spree: “It didn’t take off until Berlin.”

The exhibition and catalog focus on Corinth’s career and his major influence on the city’s art scene, but also on his influential private environment. Less familiar themes illustrate how modern the artist's painting, life, and thinking were: Corinth’s painting school, where he primarily taught women, and his work for the Berlin theater.

Lovis Corinth (1858–1925) is considered one of the most important representatives of German Impressionism. Born in East Prussia, the painter studied in Königsberg, Munich, and Paris before rising to become a leading figure of the Berlin Secession. His extensive oeuvre ranges from portraits and nude painting to landscapes. At the beginning of the 20th century, he became one of the most important representatives of Modernism.
EXHIBITION

Berlinische Galerie

October 9, 2026 – January 25, 2027
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