"Today we are searching for things in nature that are hidden behind the veil of appearance... We look for and paint this inner, spiritual side of nature"
About this Quote
Marc is arguing that the real subject of modern painting isn’t landscape, animals, or even color as decoration. It’s perception itself: the conviction that the visible world is a decoy, and that the painter’s job is to break into whatever hums beneath it.
Written from inside the turbulence of early 20th-century Europe, the line lands as a manifesto for Expressionism and, more specifically, the Blue Rider circle Marc helped define. Photography had already “won” the contest of surface accuracy; industrial modernity was turning nature into raw material; and the old promises of academic realism were starting to feel like polite denial. So Marc retools painting into a kind of spiritual technology. “Searching” gives it the pressure of inquiry, not reverie. “Veil of appearance” borrows a near-mystical vocabulary (part Schopenhauer, part Symbolist atmosphere) that casts everyday sight as inadequate, even suspect.
The subtext is audacious: the artist claims privileged access. Not to facts, but to essence. That’s why Marc’s animals aren’t zoology; they’re metaphors for innocence, purity, or cosmic order, rendered in un-natural blues and reds that behave like emotions rather than pigments. “Paint this inner, spiritual side” is also a quiet rejection of the market-friendly charm of prettiness. He’s telling the viewer: stop asking whether it looks real; ask whether it feels true.
Given Marc’s death in World War I, the quote reads with added bite. The “inner” he’s chasing isn’t escapism; it’s an attempt to salvage meaning as the outer world accelerates toward catastrophe.
Written from inside the turbulence of early 20th-century Europe, the line lands as a manifesto for Expressionism and, more specifically, the Blue Rider circle Marc helped define. Photography had already “won” the contest of surface accuracy; industrial modernity was turning nature into raw material; and the old promises of academic realism were starting to feel like polite denial. So Marc retools painting into a kind of spiritual technology. “Searching” gives it the pressure of inquiry, not reverie. “Veil of appearance” borrows a near-mystical vocabulary (part Schopenhauer, part Symbolist atmosphere) that casts everyday sight as inadequate, even suspect.
The subtext is audacious: the artist claims privileged access. Not to facts, but to essence. That’s why Marc’s animals aren’t zoology; they’re metaphors for innocence, purity, or cosmic order, rendered in un-natural blues and reds that behave like emotions rather than pigments. “Paint this inner, spiritual side” is also a quiet rejection of the market-friendly charm of prettiness. He’s telling the viewer: stop asking whether it looks real; ask whether it feels true.
Given Marc’s death in World War I, the quote reads with added bite. The “inner” he’s chasing isn’t escapism; it’s an attempt to salvage meaning as the outer world accelerates toward catastrophe.
Quote Details
| Topic | Nature |
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