Alexei Jawlensky Paintings


Alexei Georgievich Jawlensky, born on March 13, 1864, in Torzhok, Russia, was an expressionist painter and one of the key figures in the Russian avant-garde movement. He is best known for his abstract portraits and landscapes, which were influential in the development of German Expressionism.

Jawlensky joined the military at an early age, but his passion for art led him to study painting at the St. Petersburg Academy of Arts. In 1896, he moved to Munich, which was a vibrant center for the arts at the time. There, he became a member of the Neue Künstlervereinigung München (New Artists' Association of Munich) and later co-founded the influential group Der Blaue Reiter (The Blue Rider) with Wassily Kandinsky, Franz Marc, and others.

During World War I, Jawlensky was forced to leave Germany and settled in Switzerland. His work continued to evolve, and he began to develop a series of abstract portraits known as 'Mystical Heads' and later the 'Savior's Faces,' which reflected his interest in spirituality and the human condition.

After the war, Jawlensky returned to Germany and continued to paint, despite suffering from arthritis, which increasingly limited his ability to work. His style became more rigid and icon-like, a series known as 'Abstract Heads,' reducing faces to basic elements of color and form. Jawlensky's work was eventually deemed 'degenerate' by the Nazis, and he was prohibited from exhibiting.

Jawlensky's health deteriorated, and he spent his last years in Wiesbaden, Germany, where he died on March 15, 1941. Despite the challenges he faced, Jawlensky left a lasting legacy as an artist who constantly sought new means of expression and contributed significantly to the evolution of modern art in Europe.