(b Greifswald, 5 Sept. 1774; d Dresden, 7 May 1840). The greatest German Romantic painter and one of the most original geniuses in the history of landscape painting. His home town is near the Baltic coast, and the sea and shipping often feature in his work, although he depicted them imaginatively rather than topographically. After studying at the Copenhagen Academy under Juel and Abildgaard from 1794 to 1798, he settled permanently in Dresden. There he led a quiet life, interrupted only by occasional excursions to the mountains or to his homeland coast, single-mindedly pursuing his personal insight into the spiritual significance of landscape. Brought up in a strict Lutheran atmosphere and with a childhood marred by the death of his mother and three siblings, he was intensely introspective and often melancholic (although his marriage at the age of 44 brought him much happiness), and he relied on deep contemplation to summon up mentally the images he was to put on canvas.
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‘Close your bodily eye, so that you may see your picture first with your spiritual eye,’ he wrote, ‘then bring to the light of day that which you have seen in the darkness so that it may react on others from the outside inwards.’ Friedrich began with topographical drawings in pencil and sepia wash and did not take up oil painting until 1807. One of his first works in the new medium, The Cross in the Mountains (1808, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen, Dresden), caused great controversy because it was painted as an altarpiece, and to use a landscape in this unprecedented way was considered sacrilege by some critics. His choice of subjects often broke new ground and he discovered aspects of nature so far unseen: an infinite stretch of sea or mountains; snow-covered or fog-bound plains in the strange light of sunrise, dusk, or moonlight. Even when he does not use any overt religious symbolism, his landscapes convey a sense of haunting spirituality. When he included human figures, they are often shown from behind, so that—faceless—they serve as ‘everyman’ (Wanderer above a Sea of Fog, c.1818, Kunsthalle, Hamburg). Friedrich had a severe stroke in 1835 and returned to his small sepias. Although he enjoyed considerable success and renown earlier in his career, by the time of his death he was virtually forgotten and his immediate influence was confined to members of his circle in Dresden, notably G. F. Kersting, who sometimes painted the figures in Friedrich's work. It was only at the end of the 19th century, with the rise of Symbolism, that his greatness began to be widely recognized. Most of his work is still in Germany; Winter Landscape (c.1811), acquired by the National Gallery, London, in 1988, is the first Friedrich oil to enter a British public collection.
Text source: The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists (Oxford University Press)