THE COLLECTION
Otto Dix (German, 1891–1969)
The Portfolio
The War (Der Krieg)
- Date:
- 1924 (prints executed 1923-1924)
- Medium:
- Portfolio of fifty etching, aquatint, and drypoints
- Dimensions:
- plate (each approx.): 8 11/16 x 9 1/16" (22 x 23 cm); sheet (each approx.): 15 11/16 x 16 9/16" (39.8 x 42.1 cm)
- Publisher:
- Karl Nierendorf, Berlin
- Printer:
- Otto Felsing, Berlin
- Edition:
- 70
- Credit Line:
- Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller
- MoMA Number:
- 159.1934.1-50
- Copyright:
- © 2013 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
Heather Hess, German Expressionist Digital Archive Project,
German Expressionism: Works from the Collection. 2011.Appearing ten years after the conflict began, Otto Dix's monumental portfolio Der Krieg (The war) neither glorifies World War I nor heroizes its soldiers but shows, in fifty unrelentingly graphic images, the horrible realities experienced by someone who was there. Dix, an artillery gunner in the trenches at the Somme and on the Eastern Front, focused on the aftermath of battle: dead, dying, and shell-shocked soldiers, bombed-out landscapes, and graves.
Dix manipulated the etching and aquatint mediums to heighten the emotional and realistic effects of his meticulously rendered images of horror. He stopped out ghastly white bones and strips of no man's land, leaving brilliant white patches; multiple acid baths ate away at the images, mimicking decaying flesh.
Titles detailing precise places and dates confer an illusion of documentary authenticity. Dix did not transcribe his wartime sketchbooks; these nightmarish scenes are based on his memories of battle, on photographs (including many that had been censored during wartime), and on catacombs. For Dix, these prints were like an exorcism. Dix's publisher, Karl Nierendorf in Berlin, circulated the portfolio throughout Germany with a pacifist organization, Never Again War, though Dix himself doubed that his prints could have any bearing on future wars. Despite the intensive publicity, Nierendorf sold only one complete portfolio from the edition of seventy.
German Expressionism: The Graphic Impulse
March 27–July 11, 2011
These images, based largely on Dix's grisly memories, are an unflinching account of the horror and perversity of war. Many picture the aftermath of battle: dying, dead, or decomposing bodies, shell-shocked soldiers, and bombed-out landscapes. The artist exploited the corrosive nature of etching and aquatint—mediums in which acid etches a metal printing plate—to heighten the sense of decay. Dix had served as a machine gunner from 1914 to 1918 and saw combat on both the Eastern and Western fronts.
Deborah Wye, Artists and Prints: Masterworks from The Museum of Modern Art, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2004, p. 92
In paintings, drawings, and prints, Otto Dix portrayed the corruption and social apathy of German society after World War I with harsh, critical realism. Completing some three hundred prints during his lifetime, he experimented extensively with etching, lithography, and woodcut, making his most significant printed work during the early 1920s in response to the horror of the war and its aftermath.
In 1909 Dix moved to Dresden to study art. At the onset of World War I he volunteered to serve as a machine gunner and suffered serious wounds in front-line advances through Belgium and France. When he returned to Dresden to resume his studies, Dix joined a group of young radical Expressionists and also had contact with Dadaists, whose anarchism encouraged his growing nihilism. Directing a critical eye toward German society, Dix became preoccupied with subjects like veterans and urban decay, as well as prostitution and the destructive power of sex. In Syphilitic, evil temptation literally fills a man's head, as he suffers from the madness brought on by this disease.
In the early 1920s, Dix was encouraged by art dealer Karl Nierendorf to make prints for broad distribution. He turned to illustrating the devastation of the trench warfare he had experienced, creating an epic series of fifty intaglios that have been compared to Goya's The Disasters of War. The imagery in this series differs radically from the 1916–18 Futurist-influenced sketches he had made at the front, when, deeply interested in the philosophy of Friedrich Nietzsche, he enthusiastically embraced war as an inevitable part of life. In these later images, Dix portrays the destructive effects of war, including rotting corpses and bombed cities and landscapes, as well as its dehumanizing impact. In Storm Troops Advance under Gas Attack, soldiers are shown as menacing ghouls whose depravity is emphasized by terrifying gas masks.
Harper Montgomery
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© Copyright 2011 The Museum of Modern Art

![Otto Dix. Buried Alive (January 1916, Champagne) [Verschüttete (Januar 1916, Champagne)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/108/w155h170/CRI_166108.jpg)
![Otto Dix. Gas Victims (Templeux-La-Fosse, August 1916) [Gastote: Templeux-La-Fosse, August 1916] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/803/w155h170/CRI_123803.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Wounded Man (Autumn 1916, Bapaume) [Verwundeter (Herbst 1916, Bapaume)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/459/w155h170/CRI_116459.jpg)
![Otto Dix. Near Langemarck (February 1918) [Bei Langemarck (Februar 1918)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/217/w155h170/CRI_134217.jpg)
![Otto Dix. Relay Post (Autumn Battle in Champagne) [Relaisposten, (Herbstschlacht in der Champagne)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/116/w155h170/CRI_166116.jpg)

![Otto Dix. Wounded Man Fleeing (Battle of the Somme, 1916) [Fliehender Verwundeter (Sommeschlacht 1916)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/806/w155h170/CRI_123806.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Mealtime in the Trench (Loretto Heights) [Mahlzeit in der Sappe (Lorettohöhe)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/811/w155h170/CRI_123811.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Corpse in Barbed Wire (Flanders) [Leiche im Drahtverhau (Flandern)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/841/w155h170/CRI_123841.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Dance of Death 1917 (Dead Man Heights) [Totentanz anno 17 (Höhe Toter Mann)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/471/w155h170/CRI_116471.jpg)

![Otto Dix. Battle-Weary Troops Retreat (Battle of the Somme) [Abgekämpfte Truppe geht zurück (Sommeschlacht)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/614/w155h170/CRI_134614.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Shell Crater with Flowers (Spring 1916) [Granattrichter mit Blumen (Frühling 1916)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/618/w155h170/CRI_134618.jpg)


![Otto Dix. Evening on the Wijtschaete Plain (November 1917) [Abend in der Wijtschaete-Ebene (November 1917)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/428/w155h170/CRI_116428.jpg)

![Otto Dix. Found While Digging a Trench (Auberive) [Gefunden beim Grabendurchstich (Auberive)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/107/w155h170/CRI_166107.jpg)









![Otto Dix. House Destroyed by Aerial Bombs (Tournai) [Durch Fliegerbomben zerstörtes Haus (Tournai)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/639/w155h170/CRI_134639.jpg)

![Otto Dix. Machine-Gun Squad Advances (Somme, November 1916) [Maschinengewehrzug geht vor (Somme, November 1916)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/432/w155h170/CRI_116432.jpg)
![Otto Dix. Dead Man (St. Clément) [Toter (St. Clément)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/775/w155h170/CRI_167775.jpg)



![Otto Dix. The Sleepers of Fort Vaux (Gas Victims) [Die Schlafenden von Fort Vaux (Gas-Tote)] from The War (Der Krieg). (1924)](http://www.moma.org/collection_images/resized/433/w155h170/CRI_116433.jpg)



