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Wilhelm Heinrich Otto Dix was an Expressionist master shaped by the harrowing experience of war. He lived through and fought in both world wars, and vividly relayed the horrors of both front-line ...
LOS ANGELES — Just over a century years ago, in 1912, Otto Dix painted “Self-Portrait with Carnation.”Two years later, the world that gave rise to this Renaissance-inspired image was gone.
The Minneapolis Institute of Art (MIA) honors the work of German artist Otto Dix in a new exhibition for the centennial anniversary of his portfolio of prints, showing the horrors of the frontlines of ...
Michael "Mac" Mackenzie, professor of art and art history at DePauw University, is the author of Otto Dix and the First World War: Grotesque Humor, Camaraderie and Remembrance. Released by Peter Lang, ...
“Wounded Man (Autumn 1916, Bapaume),” from Dix’s portfolio of 50 etchings, The War (Der Krieg), shows a brutal reality that lays waste to George W. Bush’s anesthetized vision of war wounds.
Otto Dix has been perhaps more influential than any other German painter in shaping the popular image of the Weimar Republic of the 1920s. ... These protocols of war, together with his own memories of ...
The Nazis loathed modern art. They launched a war against it. “Degenerate Art,” an exhibition in Paris on modern art’s greatest crisis, is about culture wars and where they can lead.
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