1918–1924: Beginnings and Marmorhaus Berlin
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1918–1924: Beginnings and Marmorhaus Berlin
Over the course of six months of 1918, the first year of his professional career, Josef Fenneker designed more than forty film posters for the recently founded Universum Film AG (Ufa). The works typically have the feel of rough sketches and are almost reminiscent of oversized charcoal drawings. Fenneker favors generous hatchings, interrupted lines and largely monochrome execution in these posters. Color is used solely to set accents.
During that same year, Fenneker also designed his first posters for the Marmorhaus. His collaboration with the Berlin cinema known for its fabulous movie premieres lead to a stylistic change: his linear sketches gave way to watercolor-like brush strokes. Expressive overdrawing, unexpected coloration and prevalent black backgrounds soon became fundamental design elements. Fenneker also began picking up on themes to toy with the public's expectations, particularly symbols of death in morbid surroundings, frequently combined with an erotic component. This most productive phase in the work of the poster artist Josef Fenneker ended abruptly in 1924 when Siegbert Goldschmidt suffered financial ruin. Goldschmidt, the owner of the Marmorhaus, had been Fenneker's biggest client.
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Lorenzo Burghardt (Lorenzo Buchardt), Germany 1918, directed by William Wauer
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Der Fall Rosentopf, Germany1919, directed by Ernst Lubitsch
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Prostitution, Germany 1918, directed by Richard Oswald
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Siegerin Weib, Germany 1918, directed by Aruth Wartan
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Das Wunder des Schneeschuhs, 1. Teil, Germany 1919, directed by Arnold Fanck
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Totentanz, Germany 1919, directed by Otto Rippert
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Nerven, Germany 1919, directed by Robert Reinert
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Der Graf von Cagliostro, Germany 1919, directed by Reinhold Schünzel
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Maulwürfe, Germany 1920, directed by Artur Holz
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Der Januskopf, Germany 1920, directed by Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Genuine, Germany 1920, directed by Robert Wiene
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Teufel und Circe (Der Teufel und die Circe), Germany 1920, directed by Adolf Gärtner
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Die Minderjährige, Germany 1921, directed by Alfred Tostary
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Die Bardame, Germany 1921, directed by Johannes Guter
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Das Mädel aus der Hölle, Germany 1922, directed by Friedrich Zelnik
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Die Liebe einer Königin, Germany 1923, directed by Ludwig Wolff
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker) -
Die schönste Frau der Welt, Germany 1924, directed by Richard Eichberg
© Stadt Bocholt (Stadtmuseum Bocholt / Josef Fenneker)