Red Currant

Philipp Otto Runge German

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 690

As a child, Runge learned how to cut silhouettes from his mother and sister, a practice he continued throughout his career and one that evolved from standard portrait profiles and small multifigured vignettes to detailed depictions of plant life. In nature, Runge found religious revelation. His process involved careful observation of the peculiarities of a species, which the cut-paper medium necessarily abstracted and idealized, such as in this example of a red currant with its berry-laden stems and feathery-edged leaves. His devotion to the cutout is apparent in his writing; at one point, he goes so far as to claim that his scissors had become an extension of his fingers.

Red Currant, Philipp Otto Runge (German, Wolgast 1777–1810 Hamburg), Silhouette

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