Frans Masereel
Frans Masereel was a Flemish painter and graphic artist who worked mainly in France, known especially for his woodcuts focused on political and social issues, such as war and capitalism. He completed over 40 wordless novels in his career, and among these, his greatest is generally said to be Passionate Journey.
Masereel's woodcuts influenced Lynd Ward and later graphic artists such as Clifford Harper, Eric Drooker, and Otto Nückel.
Biography
Upbringing
Frans Masereel was born in the Belgian coastal town Blankenberge on 31 July 1889, and at the age of five, his father died. His mother moved the family to Ghent in 1896. She met and married a physician with strong Socialist convictions, and the family together regularly protested against the appalling working conditions of the Ghent textile workers.Education
At the age of 18 he began to study at the École des Beaux-Arts in the class of Jean Delvin. In 1909, he visited England and Germany, which inspired him to make his first etchings and woodcuts. In 1911 Masereel settled in Paris for four years and then emigrated to Switzerland, where he worked as a graphic artist for journals and magazines.'', a mosaic by Frans Masereel
Emigre
Masereel could not return to Belgium at the end of World War I because, being a pacifist, he had refused to serve in the Belgian army. Nonetheless, when a circle of friends in Antwerp interested in art and literature decided to found the magazine Lumière, Masereel was one of the artists invited to illustrate the text and the column headings. The magazine was first published in Antwerp in August 1919. It was an artistic and literary journal published in French. The magazine's title Lumière was a reference to the French magazine Clarté, which was published in Paris by Henri Barbusse. The principal artists who illustrated the text and the column headings in addition to Masereel himself were Jan Frans Cantré, Jozef Cantré, Henri van Straten, and Joris Minne. Together, they became known as 'De Vijf' or 'Les Cinq'. Lumière was a key force in generating renewed interest in wood engraving in Belgium. The five artists in the 'De Vijf' group were instrumental in popularizing the art of wood, copper and linoleum engraving and introducing Expressionism in early 20th-century Belgium.In 1921 Masereel returned to Paris, where he painted his famous street scenes, the Montmartre paintings. He lived for a time in Berlin, where his closest creative friend was George Grosz. After 1925 he lived near Boulogne-sur-Mer, where he painted predominantly coast areas, harbour views, and portraits of sailors and fishermen. During the 1930s his output declined. With the Fall of France to the Nazis in 1940 he fled from Paris and lived in several cities in Southern France.
Post-World-War 2
At the end of World War II Masereel was able to resume his artistic work and produced woodcuts and paintings. After 1946 he taught at the in Saarbrücken. In 1949 Masereel settled in Nice. Between 1949 and 1968, he published several series of woodcuts that differ from his earlier "novels in picture'" in comprising variations on a subject instead of a narrative. He also designed decorations and costumes for numerous theatre productions. The artist was honoured in numerous exhibitions and became a member of several academies.Death
Frans Masereel died in Avignon in 1972 and was entombed in Ghent.Legacy
Influence
Masereel's woodcuts influenced Lynd Ward and later graphic artists such as George Walker, Clifford Harper, Eric Drooker, and New Yorker cartoonist Peter Arno.Masereel's woodcut series, mainly of sociocritical content and expressionistic in form, made Masereel internationally known. Among them were the wordless novels 25 Images of a Man's Passion, Passionate Journey, The Sun, The Idea, Story Without Words, and Landscapes and Voices. At that time Masereel also drew illustrations for famous works of world literature by Thomas Mann, Émile Zola, and Stefan Zweig. He also produced a series of illustrations for the classic Legend of Thyl Ulenspiegel and Lamme Goedzak by his fellow Belgian Charles De Coster; these illustrations followed the book in its translations to numerous languages.
Namesakes
The cultural organization Masereelfonds was named after him, as was the Frans Masereel Centre studio facility at Kasterlee.List of works
Graphic Novels
Woodcut Graphic Novels
These woodcut collections form entire, seamless graphic novels with their own, independent narrative.- 25 Images of a Man's Passion / The Passion of a Man
- Passionate Journey / My Book of Hours
- The Sun
- Political Drawings
- Story Without Words
- The Idea
- The Eternal Jew
- The City
- The Industrial Baron
- Figures and Grimaces
- The Work
- Landscapes and Voices
- The Mermaid
- From Black to White
- Dance of Death
- June '40
- Destinies 1939-1940-1941-1942
- Earth under the sign of Saturn
- Remember!
- Angel
- Phenomena
- Ages of life
- Youth
- Ecce Homo
- Key to Dreams
- Our Times
- The apocalypse of our time
- Why?
- My book of images
- My country
- Night Adventure
- Night and his Daughters
- China Memories
- Stations
- From Decay to Triumph
- Poets
- The face of Hamburg
- The road of men
- Couples
- My home
- Antwerp
- Hands
- Vice and passion
- I love black and white
- Pictures against the war
- Woodcuts against the war
Brush and Ink Graphic Novels
- Grotesque Film
- Pictures of the Big City
- Capital
- Wrath
Illustrator
- The Days of the Curse, by Marcel Martinet
- Hôtel-Dieu, Récits d'Hôpital by Pierre Jean Jouve
- Quinze Poemes by Émile Verhaeren
- Pierre und Luce by Romain Rolland
- Calamus: Poèmes, by Walt Whitman
- Die Mutter by Leonhard Frank
- Heures by Pierre Jean Jouve
- Bübü vom Montparnasse by Charles-Louis Philippe
- Das Gemeinsame by René Arcos
- Les Poètes contre la Guerre by Romain Rolland, Georges Duhamel, Charles Vildrac and Pierre Jean Jouve
- Le Travailleur étrange et autres récits by Émile Verhaeren
- Peter und Lutz by Romain Rolland
- La révolte des machines, ou la Pensée Déchainée by Romain Rolland
- Quelque Coins du Couer by Henri Barbusse
- The good Madeleine and the poor Marie, by Charles-Louis Philippe
- Fairfax by Carl Sternheim
- Cygne de Rabindranath Tagore by Kâlidâs Nâg and Pierre Jean Jouve
- Fünf Erzählungen by Émile Verhaeren
- Liluli by Romain Rolland
- Prière by Pierre Jean Jouve
- Jean-Christophe by Romain Rolland
- Thyl Ulenspiegel by Charles de Coster
- Kerstwake by Stijn Streuvels
- Swane by Emmanuel De Bom
- Der Zwang. Phantastische Nacht by Stefan Zweig
- Im Strom der Zeit: Gedichte by Ernst Preczang
- Das Bein der Tiennette und andere Erzählungen by Charles-Louis Philippe
- De man zonder lijf by Herman Teirlinck
- Ode a la France Meurtrie by Louis Piérard
- Jugement by Agrippa d'Aubigné
- La légende d’Ulenspiegel by Charles de Coster
- Die Nacht by Rudolf Hagelstange
- Vater Perdrix by Charles-Louis Philippe
- Du bist für alle Zeit geliebt. Gedichte by Johannes R. Becher
- Vom Verfall zum Triumph by Johannes R. Becher
- Moriae Encomium: Or The Praise Of Folly by Desiderius Erasmus
- Dolle Dinsdag by Theun de Vries
- Fleurs du mal by Charles Baudelaire
- The Ballad of Reading Gaol by Oscar Wilde
Animation
- The Idea : collaboration with Berthold Bartosch on an animated adaptation.
Works Published in Journals
- Woodcuts in Demain and Les Tablettes.
- Drawings in La Feuille.
Art Collections
Solo Collections
- Arise Ye Dead: The Infernal Resurrection -- A collection of 10, anti-war woodcuts.
- The Dead Speak -- A collection of 7, anti-war woodcuts.
Mixed Collections
- 1925: An Almanac for Art and Poetry, published by Kurt Wolff Verlag