

Frans Masereel
Cultural Positioning
- • Expressionism
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
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Frans Masereel was a Belgian woodcut artist and printmaker whose bold black-and-white compositions developed a distinctive visual language of social protest and urban anxiety. Working primarily in woodblock and linocut from the 1920s onward, he created wordless narrative sequences that anticipated the graphic novel form, depicting industrial labor, poverty, and the psychological alienation of modern city life. His graphic novels, including City (1925) and Passionate Journey (1919), employed stark contrasts and geometric forms to convey emotional and political content without text. Masereel's work influenced generations of socially engaged artists and remains foundational to European expressionist printmaking.
Source: Christies Artsy · Trust score: 100% · Updated 1mo ago













