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Otto Dix
Otto Dix (December 2, 1891 - July 25, 1969) was a German expressionist
and anti-war painter and a veteran of the First World War. His most
famous paintings were Metropolis (1928) and a 1932 triptych Trench
Warfare.
Otto Dix was born in Untermhaus, Germany, now a part of the city
of Gera. In 1910, he entered the Dresden School of Arts and Crafts
and supported himself as a portrait painter.
When the First World War erupted, Dix enthusiastically volunteered
for the German Army. He was taken to a field artillery regiment
in Dresden. In the fall of 1915 he was assigned as a non-commissioned
officer of a machine-gun unit in the Western front and took part
of the Battle of the Somme. He was seriously wounded several times.
In 1917, his unit was transferred to the Eastern front until the
end of hostilities with Russia. Back in the western front, he fought
in the German Spring offensive. He earned the Iron Cross and reached
the rank of vice-sergeant-major.
Dix was profoundly affected by the sights of the war. He would
later tell about his recurring nightmare where he was crawling through
destroyed houses. He produced a series of drawings and prints that
reflected that traumatic period.
In the Weimar Republic Dix studied at the Dresden Art Academy,
became a founder of the Dresden Secession, and was a contributor
to the Neue Sachlichkeit exhibition in Berlin in 1925. His paintings
became his expression of the bleaker side of life, especially war.
He used realistic pictures of disfigured soldiers as his model.
His 1923 painting The Trench, which depicted dismembered and decomposed
bodies of soldiers in a trench after a battle caused such a furor
that the Wallraf-Richartz Museum hid the painting behind a curtain.
In 1925 the then-mayor of Cologne, Konrad Adenauer, cancelled the
purchase of the painting and forced the director of the museum to
resign.
Like the work of his friend and fellow veteran George Grosz, Dix's
material was extremely critical of contemporary German society and
often dwelled on the act of Lustmord, or sexual murder. Dix's postwar
depictions of soldiers and veterans very clearly illustrates their
invisibility within contemporary German society, a concept also
developed in Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front.
When the Nazis came to power in Germany, they regarded Dix as a
degenerate artist and had him sacked from his post as an art teacher
at the Dresden Academy. He later moved to Lake Constance. Dix's
paintings The Trench and War cripples were exhibited in the Nazi
exhibition of degenerate art, Entartete Kunst. They were later burned.
Dix was forced to join the Nazi-controlled Imperial chamber of
Fine Arts in order to be able to work as an artist at all and had
to promise to paint only landscapes. He still painted an occasional
allegorical painting that criticized Nazi ideals. In 1939 he was
arrested on a trumped-up charge of being involved in a plot against
Hitler but was later released.
During World War II Dix was conscripted into the Volkssturm. He
was captured by French troops at the end of the war and released
in February 1946.
Dix eventually returned to Dresden. After the war most of his paintings
were religious allegories or depictions of post-war suffering.
Otto Dix died in Singen, Germany, in 1969.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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