Nov 15, 2007

The War: Seen on the Slope at Cléry-sur-Somme

The War: Seen on the Slope at Cléry-sur-Somme

1924

Otto Dix

(German, 1891–1969)

Etching and aquatint

John L. Severance Fund 1995.214

Catalogue raisonné: Karsch 97

Location

Description

Otto Dix married technique and expression in these painfully candid images of war from a portfolio of 50 prints. He exploited the corrosive qualities of the acid used to etch the copper plate by promoting a grainy unevenness, which reinforces the physical and moral decay in his horrific yet ordinary scenes of war. Nihilistic and brutal, Dix’s images match the Expressionists’ desire for raw truth. At times, they also call upon traditional iconography, such as the skulls, or memento mori (reminder of death), in Dead Men before the Position near Tahure. Dix called war both “horrible” and “tremendous,” and viewed the artist’s role as that of a witness: “No, artists are not there to reform and convert. They are far too little for that. They must testify.”

See also
Collection: 
PR - Etching
Department: 
Prints
Type of artwork: 
Print

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