Overview
George Grosz (1893-1959) was an artist of his times, deeply disturbed by the nationalistic, militaristic, bourgeois tendencies of early 20th-century Germany. Drawing on his talents as a draftsman and caricaturist, he vented his bitterness in pen, ink, and oil paint, focusing in particular on dark, satirical city portraits of Berlin. With grotesque, exaggerated figuration, Grosz pictured an underworld of criminals, lost soldiers, and prostitutes as much as corpulent profiteers, corrupt politicians, and self-appointed moralists. From Grey Day to The Agitator, his caustic chronicle did much to establish our visual consciousness of the febrile Weimar era.This concise artist introduction follows Grosz through the dingy back alleys and decadent bars of his dark, disturbing city portraits right through to his emigration to the United States amid the rise of the Nazi party. From densely populated paintings to fine schematic sketches, we explore his influential role in both Berlin Dada and the New Objectivity movement and piece together the passion and precision behind his biting chronicle of a volatile, forboding age.
Full Product Details
Publisher: Taschen GmbH
Imprint: Taschen GmbH
ISBN: 9783836546546
ISBN 10: 383654654
Pages: 96
Publication Date: 25 March 2018
Audience:
General/trade
,
Professional and scholarly
,
General
,
Professional & Vocational
Format: Hardback
Publisher's Status: Active
Availability: In Print

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Author Information
Born in Augsburg, Germany, in 1958, Ivo Kranzfelder studied art history and history in Munich, writing his dissertation on the link between Surrealism and contemporary fashion photography. Since 1986 he has published numerous articles in art journals, and catalogue essays on modern and contemporary art, as well as on photography. His book on George Grosz was published by TASCHEN in 1993. That year he took a teaching post at the University of Munich, where he lives and works as a freelance author.