Max Pechstein
Hermann Max Pechstein (31 December 1881 – 29 June 1955) was a German Expressionist painter and printmaker, recognized as a key figure in the Die Brücke artists' group, which pioneered the movement's emphasis on emotional intensity and simplified forms.[1][2]
Born in Eckersbach near Zwickau to a working-class family, Pechstein apprenticed as a decorative painter from 1896 to 1900 before studying at Dresden's School of Applied Arts and Royal Academy, where he first encountered the radical aesthetics of Die Brücke in 1906.[1][3] Relocating to Berlin in 1908, he co-founded the Neue Sezession and produced vibrant works featuring nudes, landscapes, and woodcuts influenced by non-Western art forms, including a 1914 expedition to Palau in the South Pacific.[4] His service on the Western Front during World War I interrupted his career, after which he resumed prolific output amid the Weimar Republic's cultural ferment.[1] In the Nazi era, Pechstein's early Expressionist pieces were branded degenerate art, leading to confiscations and professional ostracism, though he adapted by producing more restrained landscapes and briefly aligning with state-sanctioned institutions before resuming modernist pursuits post-1945.[2][1]