MUNICH.- If one views all this the whole war or even ones whole life as just one scene on infinitys stage, then things become much easier to bear (Max Beckmann, 12 September 1940)
As a painter, Max Beckmann is world famous. As a diarist, he is waiting to be discovered anew. Astute, humorous and pithy, he was an observer and commentator on his times and works. Unlike previous book publications, his complete writings have been available to the public for the first time in digital form, under
www.beckmann-tagebuecher.de. An image of every handwritten entry can be seen, together with a transcription and annotations.
Under the direction of Oliver Kase, the project was developed at the Max Beckmann Archive in the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen by Nina Peter and Christiane Zeiller from 2020 onwards and funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG), the Herbert Schuchardt-Stiftung, PIN. Freunde der Pinakothek der Moderne e.V. and the Freunde des Max Beckmann Archivs e.V.
Beckmanns entries from 1903/04, 1908/09, 1912/13 and from the period between 1940 and 1950 have survived. This new edition provides insights into Beckmanns life and work that have previously remained unseen. New facets of the artist emerge: his keen interest in world politics, his extensive networking, his business acumen and his passion for the cinema and literature. Many of the people mentioned in the diaries have been identified including well-known contemporaries such as Heinrich George and Jacques Lipchitz. Most of the books he read and the films he watched have also been traced. Notes on picture sales and prices also provide insights into the painters financial circumstances, the art trade and the provenance of his works. Numerous drawings between diary entries have also been analysed.
Nothing is going to faze me anymore no matter what shall come. (Max Beckmann, 1 September 1940)