Oil On Canvas, Real Flavor of Old Masters

Max Buri

Max Buri Brienzer Bauerin mit Korb oil painting on canvas
Brienzer Bauerin mit Korb
Painting ID::  50158
new18/Max Buri-796595.jpg



Max Buri Brienzer Bauerin mit Korb oil painting on canvas



Visit European Gallery


  Max Buri
  1868-1915,Swiss painter. While still at school he was given drawing lessons by Paul Volmar (1832-1906) in Berne. From 1883 he was a pupil of Fritz Schider (1846-1907) in Basle, where he became acquainted with the works of Hans Holbein the younger and Arnold B?cklin. In 1886 he went to the Akademie der Bildenden K?nste in Munich, transferring in 1887 to Simon Holl?sy painting school. After seeing the works of the French Impressionists exhibited in Munich, he moved to the Acad?mie Julian in Paris in 1889. He made several journeys to Algeria, Holland, Belgium and England, and in 1893 he returned to Munich to study under Albert von Keller. In 1898 he settled in Switzerland, living first at Lucerne, then from 1903 in Brienz, near Interlaken. About 1900, influenced by the paintings of Ferdinand Hodler, Buri moved on from his early genre pictures, which were in mawkish shades of pink in the style of Keller and H?llosy, to achieve an individual style that brought him great popularity. He established his reputation with Village Politicians (1904; Basle, Kstmus.). He painted mainly the landscape and people of the Bernese Oberland, often depicting single figures and groups in front of bare indoor walls in realistic everyday scenes. The expressiveness of the compositions is achieved by clear contours and powerful clearly differentiated surfaces in local colours. Buri works are essentially populist rather than intellectual and avoid Hodler strict parallelism and Symbolist content.
  Brienzer Bauerin mit Korb
  mk208 um 1912

  Related Paintings::.
  | Pavonia | charles sturt den australiska utorskningens fader upptackte darlingfloden 1828 och foljde den nedstroms till dess sammanflode med murtay floden. | USS Massachusetts |


Prev Painting       Next Painting