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Floor B / 20th C. / European / Between Wars

German Expressionism

George Grosz

 

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George Grosz

born: Berlin, Germany; 26 July 1893
died: Berlin, West Germany; 6 July 1959

1909 16 Studies at the Dresden Academy of Art.
1912 19 Studies at the School of Applied Art in Berlin.
1914 21 Start of WW I; Grosz does Military Service with the German Army.
1916 22 He is dismissed from the army as unsuitable. Lives for half a year in Paris studying art.
1917 24

He is recalled to the army as trainer. He is arrested as a deserter and placed in a military asylum.

Makes friends with Wieland Herzfelde, the brother of the artist John Heartfield. Grosz and Herzfelde establish the publishing house Mailk Verlag. It publishes Grosz's first portfolio of drawings. Later that year, along with Herzfelde and his brother, Grosz joins the German Communist Party (KPD).

1918 25

With Huelsenbeck, Johannes Baader, and Raoul Hausmannof, Grosz open Club Dada. The first big Dada evening in Berlin is on June 12, 1917. Huelsenbeck says: I read the introductory manifesto, in which I declared that not enough people had been killed yet. The police wanted to interfere, the children cried, the men stamped their feet. Grosz urinated on the pictures of the exhibition. All in all it was a very tumultuous, and for that reason a very Dadaistic, affair.

—Richard Huelsenbeck, Dada. Eine literarische Dokumentation. Reinbeck bei Hamburg: Rowohlt Verlag, 1984

1919 26 WW I ends. Grosz co-edits the magazines Der Blutige Ernst (Dead Seriously), Die Pleite (Flat Broke), and DER DADA with Wieland Herzfelde. Grosz has his first solo exhibition at the Hans Goltz Gallery, Munich.

 

 

Grosz: [Untitled] 1916

 Untitled
about 1916

 Grosz: Family 1916

Family
about 1916

 Grosz: Metropolis 1916

Metropolis
1916-1917
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Madrid, Spain

 Grosz: Oh Crazy World: You Blissful Cabinet of Freaks

Oh Crazy World:
You Blissful
Cabinet of Freaks
[Ecce Homo - XIV]
1916

 Grosz: Explosion

Explosion
1917
The Museum of Modern Art
New York, NY, US

 Grosz: Dedicated to Oskar Panizza

Dedicated to
Oskar Panizza
1917-18
Staatsgalerie
Stuttgart, Germany

 Grosz: Metropolis 1917

Metropolis
1917
Museum of Modern Art
New York, NY, US

 Grosz: For them is Peace Assured

For them is
Peace Assured
1919

 

1920 27 Grosz helps organize the First International DADA Fair in Berlin.
1923 30 Mailk Verlag publishes Ecce Homo. Authorities charge George Grosz with defaming the public morals in Ecce Homo. This charge is based on a law that had not been invoked for centuries. Grosz is found guilty, ordered to pay a fine of 6,000 marks; 24 plates from the book are confiscated and banned from publication.
1928 35 Again he is fined for blasphemy.

 

 Grosz: Beauty, Thee I Praise

Beauty, Thee I Praise
[Ecce Homo - III]
1920
Nierendorf Gallery
Berlin, Germany

 Grosz: Daum marries her Pedantic Automaton George in May 1920; John Hartfield is Very Pleased with It

Daum marries her
Pedantic Automaton
George in May 1920;
John Heartfield
is Very Pleased with It
1920
Galerie Nierendorf
Berlin, Germany

 Grosz: Greetings from Saxony

Greetings from Saxony
[Ecce Homo - 5]
1920

 Grosz: Self-portrait with Two Women

Self-portrait with
Two Women

1920
Collection PB van Voorst van Beest
The Hague, The Netherlands

 Grosz: Three Figures

Three Figures
1920
Collection PB van Voorst van Beest
The Hague, The Netherlands

 Grosz: With Two Women

With Two Women
about 1920
Collection PB van Voorst van Beest
The Hague, The Netherlands

 Grosz: In Memory of Richard Wagner

In Memory of
Richard Wagner
[Ecce Homo - 60]
1921

 Grosz: Ecce Homo

Ecce Homo
[Ecce Homo - IV]
1921

 Grosz: Gray Day

Gray Day
1921
Staatliche Museen,
Berlin, Germany

 

 

 Grosz: Passers-by

Passers-by
[Ecce Homo - I]
1921

  Grosz: Waltz Dream

Waltz Dream
[Ecce Homo - XIII]
1921

Grosz: Daddy and Mommy

"I remember a song
from the days of my youth"
or Daddy and Mommy
[Ecce Homo - V]
1922
George Grosz Estate
Princeton, NJ, US

 Grosz: Before Sunrise

Before Sunrise
[Ecce Homo - XV]
1922

Grosz: Dusk

Dusk
[Ecce Homo - XVI]
1922
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Madrid, Spain

Grosz: Dedicated to Professor Frued

Dedicated to
Professor Frued

[Ecce Homo - XI]
1922

Grosz: Orgy

Orgy
1922

 

Grosz: Sidewalk Café

Sidewalk Café
about 1922

Grosz: Soirée

Soirée
[Ecce Homo - IX]
1922

Grosz: Strength and Grace

Strength and Grace
[Ecce Homo - VII]
1922
Wallraf-Richartz Museum
Cologne, Germany

Grosz: Seated Woman

Seated Woman
1923

 

Grosz: Street Scene - Berlin

Street Scene - Berlin
1925

Grosz: Funeral

Funeral
about 1925

Grosz: Street Scene 1925

Street Scene
1925
Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum
Madrid, Spain

Grosz: Lovesick Man

Lovesick Man
about 1925

Grosz: The Pillars of Society

The Pillars of Society
1926
Staatliche Museen
Berlin, Germany

Grosz: Street Scene Berlin

Street Scene Berlin
1930

 

1931 38 Grosz takes position as guest lecturer at the Art Students League in New York.
1935 42 Nazis come to power in Germany, he remains in the United States as an immigrant, and his guest lectureship at the Art Students League becomes a permanent post.
1937 44 About 285 of his "degenerate" works in German museums are confiscated by the Nazis.
1938 45 Takes American citizenship.
1941 49 Begins lectureship at Columbia University, New York.
1946 54 Grosz publishes his autobiography, A Little Yes and a big No, in 1946.
1954 61 A major retrospective exhibition is given at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in 1954.
1959 66 He visits West Berlin and dies there about three weeks after his arrival.

The unexpurgated version of Grosz's Ecce Homo was reprinted in the United States in 1966 by the Grove Press. It is widely available in libraries.

Back to European art between the world wars.

German Expressionism Part 2
20th Century European Art
20th Century Overview

2003-10-04