From Thursday, March 28 2013 to Monday, June 24 2013
Prussian beauty and creative thought.
This exhibition at the Louvre Museum invites visitors to linger over two hundred works that reflect the major themes of German thought, between 1800 and 1939. Thus, works by artists such as Caspar David Friedrich, Paul Klee, Philipp Otto Runge and Otto Dix and are placed in an intellectual context which explains the trends of the time.
From the late eighteenth century to the eve of the Second World War, German history was marked by the country's need to find a sense of unity, among the nations of Europe. In this politically sensitive context, the notion of "Kultur", inherited from the Enlightenment, seemed a likely basis on which the modern German tradition could take shape.
The exhibition aims to explore how the Fine Arts, from Romanticism to New Objectivity, enjoyed a period of freedom in Germany which was conducive to artistic creativity and innovation.

The Louvre Museum
99 rue de Rivoli
75001 PARIS
01 40 20 50 50
Metro: Palais-Royal - Musée du Louvre
8 mins on foot from the station