Friedrich Through Trump-Colored Glasses

Caspar David Friedrich
The show features works on loan from three German museums—including the main draw, Friedrich’s Wanderer above the Sea of Fog, the familiar image of a windswept early 19th century figure perched on a rocky outcropping, surveying a vista filled with scuds of fog that could easily be mistaken for a tempestuous sea. Photo: Sebastian Kahnert/picture alliance/Getty Images
Marion Maneker
February 11, 2025

Why is the Met’s new show, Caspar David Friedrich: The Soul of Nature—a detailed retrospective of an artist that most Americans are only familiar with due to a popular meme—getting so much attention? I thought about this question last week as I stood on the steps of the Met early one morning, in a freezing drizzle, listening to a clutch of German art dignitaries chatter away brightly as we waited for the doors to open. There are probably two answers.