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註釋One of the leading figures of the new German Expressionism, along with George Baselitz and Anselm Keifer, Jörg Immendorffs work first came to international prominence in the 1970s. Having studied with Joseph Beuys in the 1960s, Immendorff approached painting through a conceptualist stand-point; his works deal largely with the crisis of post-war German identity, a frenetic relationship with modernity, and a deep rooted faith in the role of the artist as an integral political and social force. This book focuses on Immendorffs works on paper, a hitherto overlooked area of his oeuvre, but one that is crucial to an understanding of the artists work. They give evidence of a creative history during the course of which the artist repeatedly reconceived, analysed and altered his position.