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Wilhelm Leibl, Three Women in Church [Drei Frauen in der Kirche] (1882)

This painting by Wilhelm Leibl (1844-1900) shows the artist at the peak of his creative talent; it is a masterpiece in terms of both composition and execution. Painted in oil on mahogany, it is a relatively large work (113 x 77 centimeters) that took almost three and a half years (from October 1878 to December 1881) to complete. It was well worth the effort, however, for it secured Leibl his reputation – at the relatively young age of 38 – as one of Germany’s greatest realists. Leibl had already attracted some attention in 1869 and the early 1870s, when he was painting in Munich. He left the Bavarian capital in 1873, however, and spent the following years in the remote countryside (most notably the Ammersee region), painting village scenes. Among his best-known works of the period are Two Women of Dachau in the Tavern (1874-75), Older Farmer and Young Girl (“The Unequal Pair”) (1876/77), and Peasants in Conversation (1877). It was shortly after completing Peasants in Conversation that Leibl declared his intention to begin the central work of his life.

Leibl’s keen attention to detail and his faithful reproduction of the local costumes in Three Women in Church is astounding, especially – as Leibl wrote to his sister – given the insufficient lighting in the church that was the setting. Compositional challenges emerged as well, leaving the artist little choice but to hope that the viewer’s knowledge of church interiors would allow him to regard the two pews as parallel to each other. The chosen perspective also makes the women’s hands appear too large relative to their bodies. But, on the whole, Leibl succeeded magnificently in his harmonious depiction of three generations of women, and his ability to create a simple, but individual expression of piety in the facial features of each woman deeply impressed his artist-contemporaries, not least Vincent van Gogh. Like the earlier Peasants in Conversation, Leibl’s Three Women in Church suggested that he had become a chronicler of Germany’s rural essence by adopting the style of the Old Masters. Over time, Leibl generated a following among painters – the “Leibl circle” – who experimented with other modes of realism. His work in the 1890s garnered him more disciples and admirers, as well as prizes at international art exhibitions. Nonetheless, it was in the Bismarckian era that Liebl made his greatest impact on German art by deciding to paint villagers and farmers in their natural environment. As Leibl himself put it in a letter to his mother, he had always sought to resist the “swindle and botchery in German art” that had resulted from the mythologizing and historicizing tendencies of imperial culture (Götz Czymmek and Christian Lenz, eds., Wilhelm Leibl zum 150. Geburtstag. Heidelberg: Edition Braus, 1994, p. 67).

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Wilhelm Leibl, <i>Three Women in Church</i> [<i>Drei Frauen in der Kirche</i>] (1882)

© Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz
Original: Hamburg, Hamburger Kunsthalle. Photo: Elke Walford.