Thursday, January 8, 2026

Lovis Corinth

Lovis Corinth
Man Reading
1882
drawing
Kunsthalle Mannheim

Lovis Corinth
Portrait of Frau Rosenhagen
1899
oil on canvas
Alte Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin

Lovis Corinth
Portrait of artist Charlotte Berend
1902
oil on canvas
(Berend and Corinth married in 1903)
Landesmuseum, Hannover

Lovis Corinth
Woman with Corsage
ca. 1904
pastel on paper
Leopold Museum, Vienna

Lovis Corinth
The Three Graces
1904
oil on canvas
Ostdeutsche Galerie, Regensburg

Lovis Corinth
Terrasse in Klobenstein Tyrol
1910
oil on canvas
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Lovis Corinth
Portrait Study of a Man
ca. 1910-12
drawing
Graphische Sammlung Albertina, Vienna

Lovis Corinth
Illustration to Song of Songs
1911
lithograph
High Museum of Art, Atlanta

Lovis Corinth
Carl Hagenbeck in his Zoo with Pallas the Walrus
1911
oil on canvas
Hamburger Kunsthalle

Lovis Corinth
Bouquet with Chinese Figurine
1916
oil on canvas
Kunsthalle Mannheim

Lovis Corinth
Still Life with Ham
1917
oil on canvas
Kunsthalle Mannheim

Lovis Corinth
Woman with Wine Glass
1918
oil on canvas
Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal

Lovis Corinth
Self Portrait
1918
oil on canvas
Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne

Lovis Corinth
October in Walchensee
1919
oil on panel
Staatliche Kunsthalle, Karlsruhe

Lovis Corinth
Susanna and the Elders
1923
oil on canvas
Landesmuseum, Hannover

Lovis Corinth
Portrait of Herbert Eulenberg
1924
oil on canvas
Belvedere Museum, Vienna

Chorus of the daughters of Danaus: 

Think, and become wholeheartedly
our pious sponsor:
do not betray the fugitive 
who comes from afar, set in motion
by an impious expulsion,

and do not look on while I am seized as plunder
from this abode of so many gods,
you who hold all power in this land!
Recognize the men's outrageous behaviour,
and guard against wrath.

Do not tolerate seeing the suppliant
dragged away from the divine images, in defiance of justice,
by the headband, like a horse,
and grabbed by my richly woven robes.

Know this: whichever decision you make
will hereafter affect your children and your house: matching justice
must be paid in full.
Ponder that. Justice prevails by the will of Zeus.

Pelasgus:  I have indeed pondered, and this is where my thoughts have run aground. There is absolutely no way to avoid provoking a great war, either against these or against those. The ship has been bolted together, and only restraining cables, one might say, are keeping it at the shore;* nowhere is there an outcome free from pain. Even goods taken from a ransacked house can eventually be replaced, by the grace of Zeus god of possessions, by other goods in excess of what was lost, and he can replenish its stores; and a tongue that has loosed off words that are out of season – painful darts that stir anger – well, speech can soothe the hurt speech has caused.  But to ensure that kindred blood shall not be spilt, one should make ample offerings, and many victims should fall in sacrifice to many gods to avert such a scourge. I declare I have completely stepped aside from this dispute; I would rather be ignorant than knowledgeable about these troubles. May all be well – but that is not my expectation. 

– Aeschylus, from Suppliants (ca. 470-460 BC), translated by Alan H. Sommerstein (2008)

*The ship represents Pelasgus' decision, and its launching, now imminent, represents the moment when that decision will become irrevocable and its consequences unavoidable. The construction of the hull is now complete, but the vessel is still attached by cables to a windlass on shore: once the cables are let go, the ship will be waterborne.