Description: This is a watercolor by Joachim Probst painted in 1954. This is a classic Probst crucifixion image. The image is approximately 3 ¾” x 13” in an 8 ½” x 17 ½” frame. The watercolor is matted behind glass and is in very good condition. Joachim Probst (1913–1980) lived in Greenwich Village in New York City from 1936 to the mid-1970s. Though there was a core of serious Probst collectors, not much was known about Probst until his personal journal was discovered in 2010. His peers in Greenwich Village included Jackson Pollack, Willem de Kooning, and Franz Kline. Joachim Probst’s thoughts from an article in Contemporary American Painting and Sculpture, University of Illinois, 1959: “I was born September 1, 1913, in New York City. Self-taught. Through my endeavor to seek self-esteem, I became a misanthrope with a firm hand on delusion. This brilliance soon introduced me into poverty, and with so fearful a future granted me, I coined and struck this phrase, ‘Art is the stand against decay.’ And with this in mind, I entered my paradise of immortality. And with this paradise came my hell. And in hell I called on Satan. Joachim Probst is one of the few contemporary artists who has recklessly committed himself to deal with the ultimate symbols themselves; the Christ, the Mother, King David…and Ahab. These are some of the figures he dares to paint. “Christ painter, go away,” was the epithet hurled at Probst by some of the Greenwich Village habitues who paint. Our Cathedral church again pushes the lesser over and makes room for the Christ painter who uses the contemporary idiom that few others can handle with any but non-objective work. This artist with unique defining power comes among us. His Christ will cause many of us to tremble as we are confronted by Him. O noble Son of God ‘Consider my madness. I am a lunatic without an asylum, Even a cripple without a crutch, Surely the angels must weep for me.’ I feared, I trembled, and I painted. I stood in dark places (clothed in black) calling, ‘Would’st that I could take a sure step in a sure direction.’ Alas, Satan spoke. ‘God thou shalt never know, guilt is thy name. Art thou shalt have, best be thy lot an instrument to uphold the faith, Art thou shalt have. Sing thee Christ forever. Will is woe, woe is thy will, change “me” to “I,” brevity is thy purity—Seek the pact, turn not from gloomy madness. Despair is thy mother.’”
Price: 1195 USD
Location: Baltimore, Maryland
End Time: 2024-10-09T01:19:14.000Z
Shipping Cost: N/A USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Type: Painting
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Size: Small
Theme: Religious
Production Technique: Watercolor Painting
Subject: Christ