Available Formats
Otto Dix and the Memorialization of World War I in German Visual Culture, 1914-1936
By (Author) Ann Murray
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
25th January 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
709.2
Hardback
240
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book examines the confrontational war pictures of Otto Dix (18911969) and explores their role in shaping the memory of World War I in Germany from 1914 to 1936. Dixs thirty-eight months on the World War I battlefields profoundly influenced his post-war artistic career, saw him produce some of the most enduring images of the conflict and establish himself as one of Europes leading modernists. Offering substantial new research and presenting numerous primary sources to an English readership for the first time, the book examines Dixs war pictures within the broader visual culture of war in order to assess how they functioned alternatively as cutting-edge modernist art and transgressive war commemoration. Each chapter provides a case study of the first public display of one or more of Dixs war pictures at key exhibitions and explores how their reception was subjected to changing socio-political and cultural conditions as well as divergent attitudes to the lost war. Bringing a unique perspective and original scholarship to Dixs war works, Otto Dix and the Memorialization of World War I in German Visual Culture, 1914-36 is essential reading for art historians of World War I and the visual culture of Weimar Germany.
Ann Murray is an independent scholar from Ireland. She is the editor of Constructing the Memory of War in Visual Culture since 1914: The Eye on War (2018).