Two young women move arm in arm through a crowded modern street, yet German artist August Macke makes them feel strangely calm inside the rush. The girl at left has bright reddish hair and turns her face away from us, her body angled forward as if she has just noticed something beyond the frame. Her companion, with dark hair pulled back, is shown in profile in a dress of deep red, rose, and brown. Their linked arms create the emotional center of the painting. Around them, the city breaks into splintered planes, sharp diagonals, flashes of yellow light, fragments of wheels, railings, figures, shopfront reflections, and bouquet-like bursts of color near the lower edge. Space feels unstable and alive. The girls are clearly human and solid, but nearly everything surrounding them seems to vibrate, flicker, and fracture into movement. That tension is the point. Macke sets human closeness against the speed and sensory overload of modern life. The Städel notes how strongly the painting reflects the impact of Italian Futurism and French Cubism as the city is all motion, geometry, duplication, and glare, while the girls remain comparatively classical and self-contained. They do not dissolve into spectacle. Painted in 1913, when Macke was in his mid-twenties and already one of the most gifted artists in the orbit of Der Blaue Reiter, the work shows how deftly he absorbed new avant-garde ideas without losing his warmth toward everyday people. He was especially responsive to French modernism and to Robert Delaunay’s color-driven experiments, yet he kept returning to scenes of strolling, shopping, looking, and being together. The sitters here are unidentified, but that anonymity adds to the painting’s modernity. They become both specific companions and emblems of urban friendship. Seen now, one year before Macke’s death in World War I at just 27, the picture feels powerful and fragile at once like an image of companionship held steady inside a dazzling, unstable world.
“Zwei Mädchen” (Two Girls) by August Macke (German) - Oil on canvas / 1913 - Städel Museum (Frankfurt am Main, Germany) #WomenInArt #AugustMacke #Macke #StaedelMuseum #StädelMuseum #Staedel #art #arte #kunst #arttext #BlueskyArt #Expressionism #GermanArtist #GermanArt #1910sArt #DerBlaueReiter