In the Baltic seaside resort of Ahrenshoop, a week of festivities starting on March 25 will kick off celebrations set to last until October to mark the 125th anniversary of the founding of its artists‘ colony.
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680 residents, two artists' houses, six galleries: those numbers clearly show where the Baltic resort of Ahrenshoop on the Fischland-Darss-Zingst Peninsula puts its focus – on art. And it’s been doing so for 125 years. In 1892 Paul Müller-Kaempff (1861-1941) built a house in the still sleepy fishing village and laid the foundations for the artists’ colony whose anniversary will be celebrated from March 25 until October. Dozens of artists found the time, surroundings and suitable light for their work there. Members of the founding generation included Anna Gerresheim (1852-1921), Elisabeth von Eicken (1862-1940) and Carl Malchin (1838-1923) – names that resonate with art lovers.
"Light, Air, Freedom"
Resort director Roland Völcker says an art trail will take visitors to the spots from which artists painted their pictures. Two eye-catching milestones call attention to the anniversary. For them, Moritz Götze, one of the best-known exponents of German pop art, made two wooden sculptures. A five-meter tall depiction of Müller-Kaempff stands on the Bakelberg, an 18-meter hill. Opposite, on the slightly lower Schifferberg, stands an interpretation of a "painting woman." Völcker says both works are meant to be impermanent and will decay.
The anniversary is the occasion for a year of celebration with the theme of maintaining traditions while living in the spirit of the times. At its heart is an exhibition, "Light, Air, Freedom," in the art museum, which opened in 2013. About 90 paintings by the leading exponents of the founding generation are being shown, "many for the first time," as Marion Schael from the museum emphasizes.
Village, Art, Nature
"A harmonious trio makes Ahrenshoop interesting for any artist," says the honorary mayor, Hans Götze, himself a painter and graphic artist. Part of it is formed by the village itself, which grew up over decades and still exists. "In addition, Ahrenshoop is blessed with intact natural surroundings."
That includes the Western Pomerania Lagoon Area National Park, the Baltic Sea and the lagoon virtually at its doorstep. "We make efforts to preserve nature in this form," said Götze. He is confident that art and the artistic climate are what make the triad complete. He says the outward signs of that are the many thatched houses and the artistic opportunities, and not just in the high season, adding that visitors come not only to admire the art, but also to take one of the art courses on offer.
But even without art, the village can't complain of any lack of popularity: overnight stays numbered about 380,000 in 2016. Gerlinde Creutzburg says the fellowship holders who come here also form part of Ahrenshoop's distinctive character. She's the director of the Kunstlerhaus Lukas in the house that Müller-Kaempff built. "I'm responsible for the future in Ahrenshoop." Every month about six young artists from all artistic fields - in addition to the visual arts, literature, composition and performance - come to the village, and 150,000 euros are invested, with the largest amount coming from the state.
Creutzburg adds that Ahrenshoop has no need to shy away from comparisons with the Worpswede artists' colony near Bremen. "Worpswede is the western German Ahrenshoop; Ahrenshoop is the eastern German Worpswede." The community on the Baltic Sea has always been a place of refuge for notable artists, even during the war and post-war years. "They went there to enjoy the light, air and freedom and to take inspiration from them," as Marion Schael relates.
Joachim Mangler/is/ms (dpa)
Ahrenshoop is not the only place that has inspired artists; so have the countryside around Worpswede, Rügen's chalk cliffs, the romantic Rhine Valley, the area of Saxony known as Saxon Switzerland and the Alpine panorama in southern Germany.
Inspiring landscapes in Germany
German landscapes have regularly inspired artists to produce great works - from the rugged chalk cliff coastline of Rügen to the colorfully glowing Alps in the south.
Image: picture-alliance/presse-bild-poss/O. Poss
Teufelsmoor
Worpswede is located not far from Bremen, in the middle of the Teufelsmoor (Devil's Moor), a harsh landscape with its own unconventional beauty. The place became known because of an artists' colony which was founded here in 1889. In search of rural motifs and simple peasant life, Art Deco painters, Impressionists and Expressionists found an artistic home in Worpswede.
Image: Rüdiger Lubricht/Worpsweder Museumsverbund
Worpswede artists' colony
A representative cross-section of the best works by Worpwede artists is on display at the Barkenhoff. This farm was once the central meeting point for the artistic community, which beyond their art, also experimented with more liberal and alternative lifestyles. The artists included Paula Modersohn-Becker, Fritz Overbeck or Carl Vinnen, among others.
Image: VG BILD-KUNST/Bonn 2014
Elbe Sandstone Mountains
Painters first discovered this mountain range to the south-west of Dresden in the 18th century. In their paintings, they captured the bizarre rock formations, the deep gorges and the plains with their enormous table mountains. These painters were followed by Europe's avant-garde art scene, who ensured that Saxon Switzerland would always be a sought-after destination for romantics.
Image: picture-alliance/D. Kalker
Romantic transfiguration
In 1786, Swiss artist Adrian Zingg immortalized the Elbe Sandstone Mountains with this striking depiction of a rock arch. The artist was a pioneer of the Dresden Romantics. His painting incorporates great detail and Romantic transfiguration. The location in the picture is called Kuhstall and is today part of the painter's route, making the artistic heritage of this area accessible.
Rügen
Caspar David Friedrich, one of the most important and influential artists of German Early Romanticism, grew up on the Baltic coast. As a young man, he was already fascinated by the landscapes of his home. Time and again the artist was drawn back to the island of Rügen with its bright white chalk cliffs. Rügen is Germany's biggest island and parts of the landscape are a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Image: picture-alliance/Arco
Idealized nature
The coastline inspired Caspar David Friedrich to paint this picture in 1818. Today it's one of the most important works of German Romanticism. Like many of his contemporaries, Friedrich idealized nature in his paintings. Where Friedrich found the motif for this painting is still anyone's guess, because erosion permanently changes the look of the chalk cliffs.
Image: gemeinfrei
The land of blue
Mountains, moors and lakes - these define the region around Murnau, also known as the land of blue. In 1908, Wassily Kandinsky and his partner Gabriele Münter discovered this idyllic landscape. Here Kandinsky founded the "Blaue Reiter" (Blue Rider) artist group.
Image: cc by sa Michael Reuter
The Blue Rider
Using strong colors, like in this painting from 1909, Kandinsky created a memorial of the Bavarian landscape that inspired him. In Murnau, which he described as a "happy bolt-hole," he developed expressionistic painting techniques and opened the path to abstraction.
Image: picture-alliance/Heritage Images
A garden at Wannsee Lake
In a summer residence on the shores of Wannsee Lake in Berlin, artist Max Liebermann escaped hectic city life. Above all else, he loved his garden, which was designed according to his ideas. Liebermann had his atelier on the top floor of his villa. Garden and villa became the subject of many of his impressionistic works.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Stache
Master of light
Liebermann was one of German Impressionism's foremost artists. More than 200 works of art were created in Wannsee. Some 40 of his paintings can be seen at the Liebermann Villa today. The central focus of the exhibition is the garden in changing light. The villa has been open to the public since 2006.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/akg-images
The great wide open of Germany's north
In the small village Seebüll, close to the Danish border, Emil Nolde and his wife created a private retreat with a home, atelier and a large garden. The latter became the subject and inspiration for many of Nolde's expressionistic water colors. With his choice of bright colors, Emil Nolde was one of the early expressionistic painters.
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/G. Franz
Expressionistic luminaries
The cottage gardens with their lush flower beds fascinated Nolde as much as the mood created by the light of the marshlands of the north. In his water colors, he brings the very nature of the landscape to light. Looking at his paintings, you might feel transported into the sunny south rather than the usually grey north.