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  Vol. 302 No. 17, November 4, 2009 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Evening Mood at Schlachtensee

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Figure 90024FA
Walter Leistikow (1865-1908) Evening Mood at Schlachtensee, circa 1895, German. Oil on canvas. 73x93 cm. Courtesy of Stiftung Statdtmuseum (http://www.stadtmuseum.de/index.php), Berlin, Germany. Photograph by Hans-Joachim Bartsch.

A romantic glow illuminates the pastoral lake in Walter Leistikow's (1865-1908) Evening Mood at Schlachtensee (cover). The aquatic smooth surface reflects light and the surrounding tall trees, belying the turmoil of the German art world at the time of Leistikow's painting. Only mild ripples mar the luminous water at the edge of Grunewald forest: no such placidity could be conferred upon the era of the Berlin Secession and its companion movements, the Munich and Vienna Secessions. The Arts and Crafts school, Art Nouveau, the German Jugendstil, and Impressionism were all factors in the gestation of the first Secession, which took place in Munich in 1892 (JAMA cover, April 1, 2009). Berlin, considered a second city—art-wise—when compared with its . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Janet M. Torpy, MD



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