German school (XX) - Vanitas, memento mori






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| €177 | ||
| €150 |
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Vanitas, memento mori, an oil on canvas work by the German School (XX) dating to 1920, with a 1930–1940 period, 67 by 51 cm, originated from Germany.
Description from the seller
German early twentieth-century school
“Vanitas, memento mori”
Oil on canvas, early twentieth century 1920/1930 (Germany)
Presentation of the painting:
The painting depicts a partially clothed skeletal figure, captured in a three-quarter pose that consciously recalls the tradition of the classical portrait. The skeleton, wrapped in a deep red drapery, wears a dark headdress adorned with a metallic element and a chain that runs down the side of the face, evoking a vague reference to military or ceremonial forms.
The work fits into the long tradition of vanitas and memento mori, but it does so with a renewed, painterly language and a free approach. Death is not represented as a violent or macabre event, but as a silent, dignified presence, almost ennobled by the posture and clothing. The bony structure, rendered with careful anatomical accuracy but without realistic sentimentality, emerges from the drapery like a body still “on stage,” suspended between life and dissolution.
The background, dominated by deep greens and lightly sketched painterly forms, helps create an ethereal, timeless atmosphere. The brushwork appears freer and more tactile than in previous paintings, suggesting a twentieth-century or late nineteenth-century sensibility, in which the interest is no longer the faithful citation of the past but its symbolic reworking.
The red of the mantle takes on a strongly allusive value: the color of power, blood, and passion, here becomes the wrapper of a body now lifeless, reinforcing the contrast between appearance and truth, between external authority and the inevitability of the end. The figure seems aware of its condition, not a victim but a witness.
Overall, the painting constitutes a visual meditation on identity, time, and transience, in which the language of official portraiture is emptied and transformed into an image of unsettling stillness. A work that dialogues with both Symbolist painting and the Baroque tradition of memento mori, offering the viewer a silent and profound reflection on the fragility of existence.
Dimensions: 67 x 51 cm
From private collection
Condition: Good, with normal signs of aging - restorations present and visible on the back
* the frame shown in the photo has been used for demonstration purposes only / frame not present
Ideal for collecting and investment
With a certificate of authenticity in accordance with the law - Expertise
Professional packing and insured shipping
Seller's Story
German early twentieth-century school
“Vanitas, memento mori”
Oil on canvas, early twentieth century 1920/1930 (Germany)
Presentation of the painting:
The painting depicts a partially clothed skeletal figure, captured in a three-quarter pose that consciously recalls the tradition of the classical portrait. The skeleton, wrapped in a deep red drapery, wears a dark headdress adorned with a metallic element and a chain that runs down the side of the face, evoking a vague reference to military or ceremonial forms.
The work fits into the long tradition of vanitas and memento mori, but it does so with a renewed, painterly language and a free approach. Death is not represented as a violent or macabre event, but as a silent, dignified presence, almost ennobled by the posture and clothing. The bony structure, rendered with careful anatomical accuracy but without realistic sentimentality, emerges from the drapery like a body still “on stage,” suspended between life and dissolution.
The background, dominated by deep greens and lightly sketched painterly forms, helps create an ethereal, timeless atmosphere. The brushwork appears freer and more tactile than in previous paintings, suggesting a twentieth-century or late nineteenth-century sensibility, in which the interest is no longer the faithful citation of the past but its symbolic reworking.
The red of the mantle takes on a strongly allusive value: the color of power, blood, and passion, here becomes the wrapper of a body now lifeless, reinforcing the contrast between appearance and truth, between external authority and the inevitability of the end. The figure seems aware of its condition, not a victim but a witness.
Overall, the painting constitutes a visual meditation on identity, time, and transience, in which the language of official portraiture is emptied and transformed into an image of unsettling stillness. A work that dialogues with both Symbolist painting and the Baroque tradition of memento mori, offering the viewer a silent and profound reflection on the fragility of existence.
Dimensions: 67 x 51 cm
From private collection
Condition: Good, with normal signs of aging - restorations present and visible on the back
* the frame shown in the photo has been used for demonstration purposes only / frame not present
Ideal for collecting and investment
With a certificate of authenticity in accordance with the law - Expertise
Professional packing and insured shipping
