Puneet Varma (Editor)

Lucifer (Stuck)

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Year
  
1890 (1890)

Artist
  
Franz Stuck

Medium
  
oil on canvas

Created
  
1890

Lucifer (Stuck) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Dimensions
  
161 cm × 152.5 cm (63 in × 60.0 in)

Location
  
National Gallery for Foreign Art

Franz Stuck artwork
  
The Sin, Salome, The Guardian, Wild Chase

Lucifer is a painting by the German artist Franz von Stuck, one of the founders of the Munich Secession, from 1890. The painting belongs to Stuck's "dark monumental" period, presenting an image of "man-demon". The canvas size is 161 x 152.5 cm.

Contents

History

The painting was bought from the studio of Stuck in Munich in 1891 by King Ferdinand for the royal collection in Sofia. On December 25, 1930, King Boris III added it to the National Museum and from 1948 it was part of the National Art Gallery. In 1985 it was transferred to the National Gallery for Foreign Art, and since 2015 the Fund Gallery "Square 500".

Exhibitions

The picture has been shown in numerous international exhibitions:

1972 - German art around 1900 in Berlin
2000 - The kingdom of the spirit. The development of the German symbolism 1870 – 1920 in Frankfurt, Birmingham and Stockholm
2005–2006 - History of melancholy in Paris and Berlin
2006–2007 - Franz von Stuck. The modern Lucifer in Trento
2008–2009 - Masterpieces of Franz von Stuck in Munich
2010 - Crime and Punishment in Paris

References

Lucifer (Stuck) Wikipedia