THE COLLECTION
About this work
Heather Hess, German Expressionist Digital Archive Project, German Expressionism: Works from the Collection. 2011.
In six penetrating drypoints, Beckmann drew out the conflicting emotions underlying his first play, Ebbi, which he described as a "modern Hamlet." The sharply rendered comedic scenes and absurdist hallucinations express his simultaneous disdain and desire for the comforts of middle-class life.
Bored and restless, Eberhard Kautsch (Ebbi) yearns to become a poet and lead a life unencumbered by his dull family, the daily drudgery of office work, and hemorrhoids. Johanna Löffel, a seductive young painter, spirits him away to a cheap brothel, where his impotence mirrors his inability to overcome conventional morality. There they meet a thug recently released from jail, Jakob Nipsel, whom Beckmann modeled on himself in the illustrations. A wild night of cocaine-induced hallucinations follows. The trio then breaks into the apartment of Ebbi's nouveau-riche friends. Realizing he cannot stomach robbery and murder, Ebbi saves the doorman from Nipsel's violence and returns, a hero, to bourgeois life.
In addition to Ebbi, Beckmann wrote two other plays, neither of which was a theatrical success. Ebbi itself was not performed until 1980. After Beckmann's frequent publisher Reinhard Piper declined to publish the play, Otto Nirenstein agreed to issue a small edition of thirty-three copies through his Johannes-Presse in 1924, and commissioned the illustrations from the artist.
Max Beckmann (German, 1884–1950)
Plate (facing page 44) from Ebbi
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- Author:
- The artist
- Date:
- 1924
- Medium:
- Drypoint from an illustrated book with six drypoints
- Dimensions:
- plate: 7 3/4 x 5 3/4" (19.7 x 14.6 cm); page: 13 x 9 5/16" (33 x 23.7 cm)
- Paper:
- Cream, smooth, wove.
- Publisher:
- Johannes Presse, Vienna
- Printer of Plates:
- Rudolf Lauterbach, Vienna
- Printer of Text:
- H. Engel & Sohn, Vienna
- Edition:
- 33, signed and numbered I-XXXIII at the colophon, on wove paper; plus unknown number of unnumbered copies reserved for the artist
- Credit Line:
- Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Fund
- Copyright:
- © 2016 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
- Reference:
- Gallwitz 276 (left side). Hofmaier 308 II B.
- MoMA Number:
- 214.1952.6
- Themes:
- City Life, Literary Subjects
- Techniques:
- Intaglio