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Impressionist & Modern Art

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3201* AUGUST BABBERGER

(Hausen in Wiesental 1885 - 1936 Altdorf)

Landscape view of Lake Lucerne and

Pilatus. 1915.

Oil on hardboard.

Signed and datet lower left: Babberger

1915.

66.5 x 82.5 cm.

The authenticity of the work has been

confirmed by Andreas Gabelmann, Sep-

tember 2016.

Provenance:

- Private collection, Switzerland.

- Private collection, San Francisco.

- Private collection, New York.

In 1895 the Babbergers came from

Germany to Basel, Switzerland, where

August Babberger spent the best part of

his school days and later completed an ap-

prenticeship with a master painter. Back in

Germany he attended a course in etching

for a year, and finally received a scholarship

for the Accademia Internationale di Belle

Arti in Florence, where Augusto Giaco-

metti was his teacher from 1909 to 1911.

Symbolism and Art Nouveau influenced

Babberger’s early work. His model was

Ferdinand Hodler, and the links to his style

in some of the paintings is unmistakable.

After his studies in Florence, Babberger

began to become more and more involved

in landscape. Through his wife who was

from Lucerne, he familiarised himself with

the Swiss landscape around Lake Lucerne,

which became his second home, with its

surrounding body of mountains providing

inspiration and fascination. From 1915 the

summit of the Pilatus caught his interest

and in subsequent years it became the

main subject of his pictures. From 1917

Babberger eventually found his way into

Expressionism, which manifested itself

in many of his pictures. After the Nati-

onal Socialists came to power in 1933,

Babberger’s art was classed as degene-

rate (“entartet”) and he lost his position

as Professor of decorative painting at the

academy in Karlsruhe. After his dismissal,

he joined his wife in Switzerland, where he

died in 1936 following an operation. After

Babberger’s death a number of his pain-

tings were seized fromGerman museums

and later shown at the “Entartete Kunst”

exhibition.

The present work is a typical example of

Babberger’s art circa 1915/16. As subject

he has chosen his preferred landscape

of Lake Lucerne and the Pilatus. Styli-

stically, Hodler’s influence is strongly in

evidence. In addition, the intensification

of the colours and the simplification of the

forms also show the influence of Augusto

Giacometti. Although Babberger is one of

the forgotten German-Swiss artists, with

his comprehensive body of work in many

museums, we may now regard him as one

of the important expressionist artists of

the classic modern period.

CHF 5 000 / 7 000

(€ 4 630 / 6 480)