Artist
Max Klinger

Germany
Max Klinger is a Germany Impressionism artist. 57 works are cataloged here, principally at Cleveland Museum of Art.
Max Klinger (18 February 1857 – 5 July 1920) was a German artist who produced significant work in painting, sculpture, prints and graphics, as well as writing a treatise articulating his ideas on art and the role of graphic arts and printmaking in relation to painting. He is associated with symbolism, the Vienna Secession, and Jugendstil (Youth Style), the German manifestation of Art Nouveau. He is best known today for his many prints, particularly a series entitled Paraphrase on the Finding of a Glove and his monumental sculptural installation in homage to Beethoven at the Vienna Secession in 1902.
Works by Max Klinger
Standing Nude
Und Doch!
Moonlit Night (Mondnacht): pl. 4
Bear and Elf (Bär und Elfe): pl.1
Evocation (Evocation)
At the Gate (Am Thor)
Disgrace (Schande): pl. 9
In the Park (Im Park): pl.4
Siesta I: pl.3
A Standing Nude
Erinnerung (Memory)
Eine Mutter
Title Page
Eine Mutter I (A Mother I)
Eine Mutter II (A Mother II)
Eine Mutter III (A Mother III)
Ein Mord (A Murder)
At the Gate (Am Thor)
Moonlit Night (Mondnacht)
Landslide (Bergsturz)
The Artist in the Attic
On Death, Part I
Night, from On Death, Part I, Opus XI (Nacht, Vom Tode, Erster Teil, Opus XI)
Child, from On Death, Part I, Opus XI (Kind, Vom Tode, Erster Teil, Opus XI)
57 works in the catalog · 24 shown
Collections represented