Art & Design Magazine

Animal Grace: Norbertine Bresslern Roth

By Adventuresintheprinttrade
Norbertine Bresslern-Roth was born Norbertine Roth in Graz, Austria, in 1891, Bresslern-Roth was one of the pre-eminent linocut artists of the twentieth century, and one of the first to truly explore the possibilities of the medium. Her work had a profound influence on later linocut artists such as Lill Tschudi, while her own choice of subjects (chiefly animals and birds) and compositional style were influenced by the art of L. H. Jungnickel. Charles at Modern Printmakers has an excellent post on Bresslern-Roth, in which he is slightly dismissive of her as essentially an imitator of Ludwig Jungnickel, and while I think it is true that she derived a great deal from him, I do believe her work has its own strengths. Pre-eminent among these is her ability to capture a sense of motion and energy in a static image. "Kampf", her energetic depiction of a fight-to-the-death between a lobster and an octopus is a striking case in point.
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, KampfLinocut, 1923
Bresslern-Roth studied under Alfred von Schrötter at the Graz Academy, then under Ferdinand Schmutzer at the Vienna Academy, and finally at Hans Hajek's school for animal painting in Dachau. Norbertine Bresslern-Roth then returned to Graz, where she lived for the rest of her life. Although she had exhibited with the Vienna Secession from 1912, Norbertine Bresslern-Roth essentially stood aside from the artistic currents of her time. A trip to North Africa in 1928 profoundly influenced her subsequent subject matter and colouring. Her linocuts are very richly inked, and the colours positively glisten from the page. My other prints by, or after, Bresslern-Roth are a series of these linocuts reproduced as lithographic facsimiles. In these, the colours, while true, have a dusty feel in comparison to  the glowing quality of the original linocuts. But they are still powerful and attractive, and I add some to this post to give a more balanced view of her output than "Kampf" alone. The lithographs were made for the book Linolschnitte von Norbertine Bresslern-Roth by Alphons Poller (1926). Bresslern-Roth evidently authorized them, but how closely she was involved beyond that is not clear. Quite probably she would have approved the proofs.
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, BavianeLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, FeuersalamanderLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, FischerLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, FluchtLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, GalagoLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, ReiherLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, ÜberfallLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, UraLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Animal grace: Norbertine Bresslern RothNorbertine Bresslern-Roth, UrishirscheLithograph after a linocut, 1926
Although she lived until 1978, Norbertine Bresslern-Roth's era was the 1920s and 30s. In 1930, for instance, she was selected as the subject of the seventh monograph in the series Masters of the Colour Print edited by Malcolm C. Salaman and published by The Studio. As well as Salaman's rather gushing text, this had eight tipped-in colour plates (screened four-colour reproductions). This was probably the high point of her international fame, though her art has come back into focus recently through the close attention paid to it in the blogs Modern Printmakers and Art and the Aesthete.

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COMMENTS ( 2 )

By lotusgreen
posted on 16 August at 04:18
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neil! it's you all along!

By lotusgreen
posted on 16 August at 04:17
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i'm glad to discover you! that octopus one reminds me so much of kuniyoshi with his animism, simplicity, and dramatic colors.

and thanks for a few images i'd never seen before!