Oslo Sketchbook of 1807

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19th century European art history
artists sketchbooks
CasparDavidFriedrich
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Drawings
early 19th century European artists
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German art history
German folklore in art
German landscape paintings
German romantic landscape painters
GermanArtists
Landscapes
Mysterious
Nature
nature in art
romanticism in art
Sketchbooks
Spiritual
Trees

Product details

  • ISBN 9781843682745
  • Weight: 250g
  • Dimensions: 197 x 297mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jan 2026
  • Publisher: Pallas Athene Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The art of Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), mysterious and spiritual as it was, depended on an intense engagement with nature. On the long hikes that he took through his native north Germany, and further south in the Bohemian mountains, he drew landscapes, buildings, people and, most intently of all perhaps, trees. Half of Friedrich’s surviving drawings come from the sketchbooks that he compiled on his journeys and referred to during the whole of his career. A handful of these sketchbooks survive intact. The one known as The Oslo Sketchbook of 1807 was used for just two months, from April to June of that year. Its 23 pages of drawings record, with almost hallucinatory simplicity and clarity, trees that Friedrich would use in his paintings for years to come.

Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), one of the great visionaries of European art, spent all his life in Northern Germany, apart from four years studying in Copenhagen, and his output appears to consist almost entirely of German landscapes. But far from being parochial, he was, in the words of the French sculptor David d’Angers, the artist who ‘discovered the tragic in landscape’. His paintings assemble minutely observed elements of nature into compo­sitions that celebrate the riches and the melancholy of a cosmos fully imbued with the divine, while never losing an almost hallucinatory engagement with reality. For all their clarity, they are the quintessence of Romanticism.