Lichtwark’s successor Gustav Pauli adopted this profile and modified it slightly, introducing several masterpieces to the galleries. His far-reaching vision was to bring modern art to Hamburg in the process. He went further than merely collecting, inviting to Hamburg such German artists as Liebermann and renowned artists from abroad like Édouard Vuillard to explore local scenes and motifs. At the same time, he sought out works of the French avant garde of his own day, while supporting German Impressionism and assembling an extensive collection of works by Max Liebermann. Lichtwark rediscovered the founding figures of early northern German Romanticism – Philipp Otto Runge and Caspar David Friedrich – and secured many of their paintings for the collection. In many ways that character still defines it today. Policy that imparted the essential contours to the Kunsthalle’s 19th-century holdings. This changed in 1886, when Alfred Lichtwark became the museum’s first director and began pursuing an acquisition In the early years of the Hamburger Kunsthalle, which opened in 1869, there was no systematic plan to build the collection to speak of. The museum has exceptionally extensive holdings of paintings by Caspar David Friedrich, Philipp Otto Runge, Adolph Menzel, Wilhelm Leibl and Max Liebermann, including numerous major works. Another special focus of the 19th-century collection is French painting, with works by Jean-Baptiste Camille Corot, Gustave Courbet, Édouard Manet, Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Paul Cézanne and Paul Gauguin. Starting from the origins of the modern period in Classicism and Romanticism, the arc spans from Realism and Naturalism to Impressionism, touching on contemporaneous salon painting, and finally ending with Symbolism. For German painting, this is achieved with almost no gaps whatsoever. Important individual works and key groupings of paintings enable the visitor to follow clearly the central developments of this eventful period in art history. The Kunsthalle’s holdings of 19th-century art contain one of the most outstanding collections of its kind in Germany.
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