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THE
SECESSIONISTS
1900 - 1930

An
exhibition presented by The Antique Trader and David Bonsall
from 24 November to 19 December 1999

In 1892 the Munich Secession was declared. This was the first
manifestation of the discontent among the young artistic
communities of Europe. In Munich, Cologne and Darmstadt, artists
such as Richard Riemerschmid, Albin Müller and Peter Behrens
were working with new ideals and principles.

In Vienna, which was ideally placed at the centre of the
Austro-Hungarian empire, voices of discontent were also being
raised in the late 1890s. Here was a perfect meeting place for
intellectuals and artists. There was an abundance of music,
philosophy, medicine and the visual arts. However the prevailing
art was of a revivalist nature, nostalgic and quite unsuited to
the developing age of the machine and industrial design.

Café society played an important part in the art world and in
March 1897 the Austrian Association of Artists was formed in the
Griensteidl coffee-house. This was a group that, because of its anti-establishment principles, became known as the Vienna
Secession.
Extract from the essay in our catalogue for the
exhibition.
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