Höch 1920
The work of Hannah Höch, Tailor’s Flower, 1920.
Yan Saquet: Les Djinns (Trentemøller Remix)
Found via Venetian Red
The work of Hannah Höch, Tailor’s Flower, 1920.
Yan Saquet: Les Djinns (Trentemøller Remix)
Found via Venetian Red
‘I am interested in the female form and the objectification and dismemberment of women. I try to make sense of this dismemberment by the very act of dismembering . . . more often than not, the artworks manifest themselves through the female gaze.’
The mixed media work of Thelma van Rensburg.
Poster for No Limit (1931) – featuring original ‘It Girl’ Clara Bow.
The Shocking Blue: Venus (Alex Dias Remix)
The work of Charles Loupot, advertisement for Coty, 1938.
The Burning Hotels: Stuck in the Middle (Baron Von Luxxury Controls Everything Remix)
Art Nouveau meets Russian Constructivism. Motion design by Matt Duplessie.
Superman, as portrayed in Mark Millar’s Red Son (2003).
Motion comic here.
Found via Raving Toy Maniac
‘Underneath they wrote: ‘Keeping Up with the Times.”
From June: The redecorated Monument of the Soviet Army in Sofia, capital of Bulgaria.
‘Unfortunately, the art survived for only a day – very early the next morning, the die-hard worshipers of communism’s corpse washed away the paint.’
Story here.
‘Suprematism, considered ‘the first systematic school of abstract painting in the modern movement,’ was developed by Kazimir Malevich in 1913 and introduced at the 1915 0-10 exhibition in St. Petersburg.’ –Alexander Boguslawski
This is my favorite Suprematist piece, Malevitch’s Sensation of Flight, c. 1914-15. Pure objects, any meaning comes from the viewer’s own interpretation.
‘Avant-garde German artists were now branded both enemies of the state and a threat to German culture.’
In 1937, the Nazi party hosted ‘Entartete Kunst.’ This traveling exhibition showcased modern art as the work of madmen, ‘degenerates’ out to destroy the world.
Confiscated art – works of Kirchner, Nolde, Beckmann, Ernst, Chagall, Matisse, Picasso, Van Gogh, Dali, Klee, Kandinsky, Lissitzky, Grosz and many others – filled the show. After, the pieces were either destroyed or auctioned off.
For more about Entartete Kunst, watch David Grubin’s powerful 1993 Degenerate Art documentary here. Read more here and here. The show’s exhibition catalog is posted here.
Art, ideas, original thoughts: All dangerous.
This past weekend I saw a documentary on The Inquisition. Things such as inquisitions, persecutions – Entartete Kunst, McCarthyism – cycle throughout history.
What beliefs, doctrines and laws exist today that limit freedom, individuality and progress?
Ludwig Meidner, Apocalyptic Landscape, 1912
Images from the Weimar blog post ‘From Calgari to Hitler,’ named for Siegfried Kracauer’s book on German cinema (1910-40).
Jakob Steinhardt, The City, 1913
Robert Wiene, Das Kabinett des Dr. Caligari, 1919
Original sketch for a scene in The Cabinet of Dr Caligari from Lotte Eisner
Erich Godal, Die Straße (The Street), 1923
Louise Brooks in “Pandora’s Box” (G.W.Pabst, 1929)
Rudolf Klein Rogge in Lang’s The Testament of Dr. Mabuse, 1933
Otto Dix, The Actor Heinrich George, 1933
George Grosz, John, the Lady Killer, 1918
Art director Erich Kettelhut & crew create the futuristic city set of Metropolis
Raoul Hausmann, Mechanical Head (Spirit of Our Age), c. 1920
John Martin, Illustration to Paradise Lost, 1825
Ever wonder what Germany may have looked like if the Weimar Republic kept going?
I like to think answers to this question could be found in the wonderful image sets posted over at kraftgenie’s Weimar blog. Each post is a collection of seemingly related imagery that is simply . . . Weimar.