Germany’s Weimar Republic (1918-1933) was a colourful yet contradictory time marked by political, artistic and societal revolution. A new exhibition in Frankfurt showcases the art that stunningly captures the era.
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Splendor and misery in the Weimar Republic
The Weimar Republic (1918-1933) was full of contradictions, political tension rising alongside artistic and societal revolutions, and all captured stunningly in German art from the era.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Foto: Galerie Michael Hasenclever
Christian Schad, 'Boys in Love'
The exhibition at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt collects images from some of the most important issues of the Weimar era. Among the political debates that took place during that time was one regarding Article 175, a law dating back to 1871 which forbade homosexuality. A grassroots campaign from 1919 to 1929 sought to abolish the law and very nearly succeeded.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017/Foto: J. Oschik, Museen der Stadt Aschaffenburg
Otto Dix, 'Woman with Mink and Veil'
After WWI, Berlin grew to be the world’s third largest city and quickly gained a reputation for nightlife and hedonism that attracted people from around the globe — including prostitutes, injured war veterans and those looking to make an easy buck. The contrast of Ku'damm's fur-clad matrons with the poverty of the tenement houses of the eastern districts was a common theme in the art of the time.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Judy and Michael Steinhardt Collection, New York
The expressionism of Otto Dix
Otto Dix used simple materials to capture Weimar Berlin’s depravity. The World War I veteran vacillated between sketches like that shown above, "Pimp and Girl," and disturbing recollections of wartime frontlines. The contrast served as criticism of the country’s inability to adequately grapple with its war past.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017
The extravagance of the Ku'damm
Comprising 190 works of art by 62 different artists, the exhibition showcases the contrasts of the Weimar Era in its selection. This sketch by Dodo (born Dörte Clara Wolff), "Box Logic," was created for the satire magazine "Ulk" in 1929 to highlight the lives of the wealthy who continued their extravagant lifestyles as anti-Semitism and economic depression severely shifted the mood in Berlin.
Image: Privatsammlung Hamburg/Krümmer Fine Art
'Margot' by Rudolf Schlichter
Irmgard Keun's novel, "The Artificial Silk Girl," brought Weimar Berlin to life from the female perspective. Struggling to make ends meet while hopping between parties and prostituting herself while wrapped in a stolen fur, the narrator comments on her fellow women, noting: "There are clubs where women sit wearing stiff collars and ties, who are frightfully proud of being perverse."
Image: Viola Roehr von Alvensleben München/Foto: M. Setzpfandt
'Self-Portrait with Son,' 1933
Granted suffrage in Germany on November 12, 1918, women were emancipated as never before. That liberality was felt in many aspects of society, as women took on professional jobs and political debates on contraception, marital rights and prostitution. Artists like Kate Diehn-Bitt captured the New Woman in their works of social realism: urban, independent, self-confident, androgynous in appearance.
Image: Nachlass Kate Diehn-Bitt/Kunstmuseum Ahrenshoop
Jeanne Mammen captured Berlin in transition
A central fixture in Berlin's art scene was artist Jeanne Mammen, Berlin-born but raised in France before she returned to the German capital during World War I. Her sharp eye captured the city and its citizens in a time of great transition. In paintings like the 1926 watercolor "Ash Wednesday," Mammen captured the era's hedonism and bore witness to the liberality and excesses of the period.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017/Foto: M. Schormann
Political tension: 'Weimar Carnival'
In "Berlin Alexanderplatz," Alfred Döblin wrote of a vibrant capital city in upheaval as he documents the life of Franz Biberkopf. In it, and in paintings like that by Horst Naumann above, the rise of anti-Semitism, militarism and National Socialism came into full view. As Döblin wrote: "He has seen the paramilitary troopers, the young men, and their leader, too, that is something."
"Splendor and misery in the Weimar Republic" seeks to make clear just how the foundation for societal and economic advancements that we might take for granted today were laid during what many recall fondly, though not altogether accurately, as a decade of decadence. The exhibition runs through February 25, 2018 at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Foto: Galerie Michael Hasenclever
9 images1 | 9
Splendor and misery in the Weimar Republic
The Weimar Republic (1918-1933) was full of contradictions, political tension rising alongside artistic and societal revolutions, and all captured stunningly in German art from the era.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Foto: Galerie Michael Hasenclever
Christian Schad, 'Boys in Love'
The exhibition at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt collects images from some of the most important issues of the Weimar era. Among the political debates that took place during that time was one regarding Article 175, a law dating back to 1871 which forbade homosexuality. A grassroots campaign from 1919 to 1929 sought to abolish the law and very nearly succeeded.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017/Foto: J. Oschik, Museen der Stadt Aschaffenburg
Otto Dix, 'Woman with Mink and Veil'
After WWI, Berlin grew to be the world’s third largest city and quickly gained a reputation for nightlife and hedonism that attracted people from around the globe — including prostitutes, injured war veterans and those looking to make an easy buck. The contrast of Ku'damm's fur-clad matrons with the poverty of the tenement houses of the eastern districts was a common theme in the art of the time.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Judy and Michael Steinhardt Collection, New York
The expressionism of Otto Dix
Otto Dix used simple materials to capture Weimar Berlin’s depravity. The World War I veteran vacillated between sketches like that shown above, "Pimp and Girl," and disturbing recollections of wartime frontlines. The contrast served as criticism of the country’s inability to adequately grapple with its war past.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017
The extravagance of the Ku'damm
Comprising 190 works of art by 62 different artists, the exhibition showcases the contrasts of the Weimar Era in its selection. This sketch by Dodo (born Dörte Clara Wolff), "Box Logic," was created for the satire magazine "Ulk" in 1929 to highlight the lives of the wealthy who continued their extravagant lifestyles as anti-Semitism and economic depression severely shifted the mood in Berlin.
Image: Privatsammlung Hamburg/Krümmer Fine Art
'Margot' by Rudolf Schlichter
Irmgard Keun's novel, "The Artificial Silk Girl," brought Weimar Berlin to life from the female perspective. Struggling to make ends meet while hopping between parties and prostituting herself while wrapped in a stolen fur, the narrator comments on her fellow women, noting: "There are clubs where women sit wearing stiff collars and ties, who are frightfully proud of being perverse."
Image: Viola Roehr von Alvensleben München/Foto: M. Setzpfandt
'Self-Portrait with Son,' 1933
Granted suffrage in Germany on November 12, 1918, women were emancipated as never before. That liberality was felt in many aspects of society, as women took on professional jobs and political debates on contraception, marital rights and prostitution. Artists like Kate Diehn-Bitt captured the New Woman in their works of social realism: urban, independent, self-confident, androgynous in appearance.
Image: Nachlass Kate Diehn-Bitt/Kunstmuseum Ahrenshoop
Jeanne Mammen captured Berlin in transition
A central fixture in Berlin's art scene was artist Jeanne Mammen, Berlin-born but raised in France before she returned to the German capital during World War I. Her sharp eye captured the city and its citizens in a time of great transition. In paintings like the 1926 watercolor "Ash Wednesday," Mammen captured the era's hedonism and bore witness to the liberality and excesses of the period.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017/Foto: M. Schormann
Political tension: 'Weimar Carnival'
In "Berlin Alexanderplatz," Alfred Döblin wrote of a vibrant capital city in upheaval as he documents the life of Franz Biberkopf. In it, and in paintings like that by Horst Naumann above, the rise of anti-Semitism, militarism and National Socialism came into full view. As Döblin wrote: "He has seen the paramilitary troopers, the young men, and their leader, too, that is something."
"Splendor and misery in the Weimar Republic" seeks to make clear just how the foundation for societal and economic advancements that we might take for granted today were laid during what many recall fondly, though not altogether accurately, as a decade of decadence. The exhibition runs through February 25, 2018 at the Schirn Kunsthalle in Frankfurt.
Image: VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2017, Foto: Galerie Michael Hasenclever
9 images1 | 9
The Weimar Republic, Germany's first attempt at democracy, came immediately on the heels of the First World War and ended with Hitler's rise to power in 1933.
Amid these contradictions, the era is often noted for its decadence: women experienced a self-liberation they had never felt before, homosexuality was slightly less taboo, and alcohol was flowing in dancehalls and venues across Berlin.
Indeed, Berlin's reputation preceded itself. A restructuring of its boundaries combined with an influx of immigrants made it the third largest city in the world during the 1920s. These immigrants flooding the city — the war injured, members of high society, industrial workers as well as artists — brought with them a diversity of experience that quickly made Weimar Berlin a study in contrasts.
While women strolled the Ku'damm in fur stoles, over in the working class neighborhoods hungry people were crammed into dirty tenements.
While the era has now been portrayed on the screen in Tom Tykwer's acclaimed "Babylon Berlin" series, a new exhibition at the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, "Splendor and Misery in the Weimar Republic," showcases the contemporary artists that captured the moment.
Comprising 190 works by 62 different artists from the Weimar era, the exhibition focuses on the uneasiness felt at the time — something which is evidenced both in the content of the pieces, but also in their motifs and styles that were influenced by the rising Dada and Cubist art movements.
As the exhibition's curator, Dr. Ingrid Pfeiffer, explains, the exhibition seeks to explore the ways in which, 100 years following the beginning of the Weimar Era, we can see how it constructed the foundation of our modern principles.
"We often read the history of the Weimar Republic from the end backwards—from its transition to National Socialism and World War II,” she writes.
Industrial advancements and economic depression
Weimar era artists, writers and other cultural players were intent on capturing the turmoil and hubbub of the times — especially in the capital of the republic, Berlin.
Alfred Döblin wrote of a street scene in his novel "Berlin Alexanderplatz," published in 1929, that is easy to envision:
"On Alexanderplatz they are tearing up the road for the underground train. You walk on boards. The electric trolleys cross the square and go up Alexanderstrasse through Münzstrasse as far as Rosenthaler Tor. There are streets to the right and left. In the streets, the houses stand close together. They are full of people from the cellar to the attic. Below are the stores…But above and behind the stores are apartments, and at the back are courtyards, side buildings, lateral buildings, buildings behind the tenements accessed via a courtyard, backs of buildings.”
On the one hand, you see industrial advancement and a hint of wealth in the post-war country. On the other, the social inequality that came along with economic depression.
The new reality
Characterized by these social tensions and political struggles, the Weimar Republic proved fertile soil for artists working at the time.
Berlin-born Jeanne Mammen returned to her birth city from France as refugee during World War I. During the Weimar years, she maintained a studio just off the Ku'damm that afforded her a front row seat from which to survey the wealthy, privileged elite whom she sketched at nightclubs and parties.
These artists and their contemporaries showcased the struggle for democracy, and reflected the reality of trying to build a life in a transitioning society that was sandwiched between crises. The new realism, or New Objectivity, art movement of the time was filled with political and societal criticism, art that revealed the economic divide underlining industrialization.
Through documenting the contradictions of the times, modern art was also coming of age, according to Pfeiffer. "In spite of the negative sociopolitical developments that the artists so succinctly describe in their works, it was during the Weimar Republic that modernism, which continues to shape our lives to this day, developed," she said.
"The Weimar Republic was a progressive era in which many pioneering ideas were formed—not only in art, architecture, and design. Besides the manifest misery, it is these tendencies that for me distinguish the splendor of the Weimar Republic.”
The exhibition runs from October 27, 2017 through February 25, 2018.