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Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt — Crucifix
Hans Burkhardt

Crucifix

1981

Hans Burkhardt's "Crucifix" from 1981 arrives as a compressed but commanding meditation on one of Western art's most enduring symbols. Rendered in oil over monotype on a modest sheet measuring 27.9 by 19.4 centimeters, the work demonstrates how Burkhardt consistently refused literal representation in favor of something rawer and more psychologically immediate. The cruciform presence here is not depicted so much as summoned, its shape fractured and nearly consumed by urgent, heavy brushwork that presses in from every direction. The monotype underlay contributes a ghostly atmospheric ground, and the oil passages laid over it create a charged tension between the fixed and the fluid, between what is buried and what insists on surfacing. Burkhardt, who trained under and maintained a lifelong correspondence with Arshile Gorky, occupies a singular position within postwar American abstraction, bridging European expressionist roots with a distinctly humanist moral sensibility. Works from the early 1980s represent a period of particular intensity in his practice, when spiritual subjects were filtered through a visual language shaped equally by grief, history, and formal rigor. In "Crucifix," the cross reads as both archetypal emblem and personal reckoning, stripped of devotional ease and reconstituted as an image of weight and fracture. The high-contrast palette and compressed scale only amplify the work's sense of psychological pressure. Signed in pencil at the lower middle with both the title and date, and presented in its original frame, the work is a tightly resolved example of Burkhardt's ability to locate monumental feeling within intimate dimensions. For collectors drawn to postwar expressionism with genuine emotional and art historical substance, this piece offers a rare convergence of scale, medium, and subject handled with uncommon conviction.

Medium
Oil over monotype
Overall
Framed
Signed
Yes

For Sale — $2500

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About this work

Hans Burkhardt, Crucifix, 1981

Hans Burkhardt's "Crucifix" from 1981 arrives as a compressed but commanding meditation on one of Western art's most enduring symbols. Rendered in oil over monotype on a modest sheet measuring 27.9 by 19.4 centimeters, the work demonstrates how Burkhardt consistently refused literal representation in favor of something rawer and more psychologically immediate. The cruciform presence here is not depicted so much as summoned, its shape fractured and nearly consumed by urgent, heavy brushwork that presses in from every direction. The monotype underlay contributes a ghostly atmospheric ground, and the oil passages laid over it create a charged tension between the fixed and the fluid, between what is buried and what insists on surfacing. Burkhardt, who trained under and maintained a lifelong correspondence with Arshile Gorky, occupies a singular position within postwar American abstraction, bridging European expressionist roots with a distinctly humanist moral sensibility. Works from the early 1980s represent a period of particular intensity in his practice, when spiritual subjects were filtered through a visual language shaped equally by grief, history, and formal rigor. In "Crucifix," the cross reads as both archetypal emblem and personal reckoning, stripped of devotional ease and reconstituted as an image of weight and fracture. The high-contrast palette and compressed scale only amplify the work's sense of psychological pressure. Signed in pencil at the lower middle with both the title and date, and presented in its original frame, the work is a tightly resolved example of Burkhardt's ability to locate monumental feeling within intimate dimensions. For collectors drawn to postwar expressionism with genuine emotional and art historical substance, this piece offers a rare convergence of scale, medium, and subject handled with uncommon conviction.

Medium
Oil over monotype
Dimensions
overall: 27.9 x 19.4 cm • framed: 36.2 x 26.4 x 1.9 cm
Year
1981
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Heather James Fine Art

More works by Hans Burkhardt

Collected by

Chase Langford