Self-portrait with champagne glass - Max Beckmann
Archival giclée
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Description
A 1919 oil painting by Max Beckmann depicting the artist in a cramped social setting. This Expressionist work uses distorted proportions and a sallow palette to convey post-war psychological tension.
Max Beckmann painted this self-portrait in 1919, shortly after the conclusion of the First World War. The artist had served as a medical orderly on the front lines. This experience altered his approach to painting. This work marks a departure from his earlier style toward the distorted and compressed spatial arrangements that define his mature period. Beckmann depicts himself in a social setting, yet the atmosphere is far from celebratory. He holds a tall flute of champagne with elongated fingers. His face is rendered with sharp angles and a sallow, greenish complexion. The eyes are wide and fixed. Behind him, a secondary figure appears with a distorted, grinning expression. This adds a sense of unease to the composition. The spatial logic of the painting is deliberately fractured. The table and the bottle in the foreground are squeezed into the same shallow plane as the background figures. This technique creates a feeling of claustrophobia. It reflects the psychological state of post-war Germany. The palette relies on acidic yellows and ochres, punctuated by deep reds. These tones contrast with the dark blacks of his suit. In the lower left corner, a bottle sits in a small bucket of ice, rendered with the same heavy, dark outlines seen throughout the piece. A framed picture hangs on the wall behind the artist, though its subject remains ambiguous and blurred. These elements contribute to the cluttered, domestic environment that feels both familiar and strange. The brushwork is visible and deliberate, lacking the smooth finish of academic portraiture. Each stroke contributes to the physical presence of the subject, making the canvas feel heavy with paint. This portrait is a significant example of the New Objectivity movement. Artists in this period sought to depict the harsh realities of contemporary life without sentimentality. Beckmann uses the motif of the socialite to mask a sense of alienation. The inclusion of the champagne glass and the formal attire suggests a return to civilian life that remains haunted by recent trauma.
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Each print is produced to order using 12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified archival paper. Designed in Britain and printed at your nearest production hub to reduce waste and speed up delivery.
Self-portrait with champagne glass - Max Beckmann
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Materials & Sizing
Museum-grade giclée on FSC-certified archival matte paper, with framed and canvas options.
- Paper sizes: A4, A3, A2, A1, A0 and B2 (50×70 cm)
- Canvas: XS (20×30 cm) to Large (60×90 cm)
- Frames: black, natural wood, dark wood or white
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Artist Biography
Max Beckmann
He was born in Leipzig in 1884 and trained at the Weimar Academy. His early work was relatively conventional; the First World War, where he served as a medical orderly, shattered both his style and his psychology. The paintings that followed, dense, allegorical, packed with symbolic figures in compressed, claustrophobic spaces, resist easy classification. His monumental triptychs, painted in exile in Amsterdam and later St Louis, combine mythology, autobiography and contemporary history.
He remains one of the twentieth century's most ambitious figurative painters, comparable in scale and intention to Picasso but less interested in formal innovation than in moral weight. He died in New York in 1950, at sixty-five.
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