【Watch Power】
Strindberg’s Landscapes
Look

Fact: August Strindberg could paint. Though he was always more renowned for his plays and novels, he was a prolific artist, producing more than one hundred works over the course of his life. In their brooding expressionism, his paintings were every inch as forward-thinking as his contemporaries—he counted Gauguin and Munch among his friends—and his work received enough notice that in 1894 he published an essay on his methods in a Parisian journal.
Strindberg, who died today in 1912, had an array of interests: at various points, he turned to painting, photography, telegraphy, theosophy, alchemy, and Swedenborgianism, a sect of Christianity that denied the Holy Trinity. The plenitude of his hobbies made him, depending on whom you asked, a polymath, a dilettante, or an insane person.
Strindberg tended to paint only in times of grave crisis, when he found himself too distraught to write. Maybe accordingly his landscapes are seldom sylvan, his seascapes seldom serene, and his skies seldom sunny. In 2001, Cabinetpublished a well-observed essay by Douglas Feuk about Strindberg’s vatic art:
In his paintings there is always a “motif”—often stormy skies, agitated waves, perhaps a lonely rock by the sea. But these landscapes or seascapes are still half-embedded in the material, like a world in the process of being created. Boundaries and differences are fluid: Air might have the same density as stone, and the rock seems mysteriously fused with the water—as if they were all but different manifestations of the same matter. In fact, the tactile surface in Strindberg’s paintings is at times emphasized so much that not only does it provide an image of nature, it also, in part, gives the impression of being nature. In the painting High Sea, for example, there are sections that Strindberg has blackened with a burner, but also patches of a brownish-gray, rough structure that seem to be not so much painted as oxidized, or in other ways created by some elementary process of nature.
Search
Categories
Latest Posts
CES 2025: Hands
2025-06-27 07:05Best Black Friday doorbuster TV deal: Save $200 on Samsung 75
2025-06-27 06:47Wordle today: The answer and hints for November 7
2025-06-27 05:27What does Airplane Mode do?
2025-06-27 05:26PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds Mini
2025-06-27 04:52Popular Posts
HP Touchscreen Laptop deal: Get $240 off at Best Buy
2025-06-27 06:19Sabalenka vs. Gauff 2024 livestream: Watch WTA Finals for free
2025-06-27 06:16The world's best
2025-06-27 05:46HP Touchscreen Laptop deal: Get $240 off at Best Buy
2025-06-27 04:26Featured Posts
Packers vs. Eagles 2025: How to watch NFL online
2025-06-27 06:32Arkadium mini crossword answers for November 6
2025-06-27 06:14Best Dyson deal: Save over $100 on Dyson V11 Origin cordless vacuum
2025-06-27 04:33Popular Articles
Best smart scale deal: Get 15% off an Etekcity scale at Amazon
2025-06-27 07:04Best gaming TV deal: Save $400 on TCL 65
2025-06-27 06:24Wordle today: The answer and hints for November 7
2025-06-27 05:02Apps that use AI to streamline your home life
2025-06-27 04:33Best Apple Pencil Pro deal: Save $30 at Best Buy
2025-06-27 04:33Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter for the latest updates.
Comments (99273)
Happy Information Network
Greenpeace activists charged after unfurling 'Resist' banner at Trump Tower in Chicago
2025-06-27 05:58Reading Information Network
Wordle today: The answer and hints for November 8
2025-06-27 05:56Star Sky Information Network
Best AirPods deal: Save $10 on Apple AirPods 4
2025-06-27 05:11Future Information Network
Best earbuds deal: Save $40 on Beats Fit Pro
2025-06-27 05:03Ignition Information Network
CES 2025: The best smart glasses
2025-06-27 04:41