Otto Dix Astounding Depictions of War

Otto Dix has created many incredible images, but none of them have been as disturbing and breathtaking as his work on war. His portraits and his criticism of the Weimar republic were quite interesting as seen in previous videos, but Der Krieg, a series of prints (and later a triptych) is really what I appreciate Dix for. Find out why!
0:00 Art and War
2:18 Der Krieg - Prints
5:27 Der Krieg - Painting
9:42 Art as a Warning
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Пікірлер: 815

  • @bircheth
    @bircheth3 жыл бұрын

    I think one important detail in the last panel is that the man Dix is carrying has a bandage wrapped around his entire head. To me it seems like Dix is implying he doesn't even know if he is saving a friend or a foe. The lack of colour in Dix and the man may also suggest a lack of blood or humanity which could be lost as a result of the war, both literally (blood) and figuratively (humanity). These are superficial observations, (could be reaching) but just some things I noticed.

  • @jack7aylor279

    @jack7aylor279

    2 жыл бұрын

    this is amazing, good observation/interpretation my kind sir

  • @onebilliontacos3405

    @onebilliontacos3405

    Жыл бұрын

    It may even be a reference to Prussian blue. Yet another horrific aspect of world war 2.

  • @haruttatlyan3584

    @haruttatlyan3584

    Жыл бұрын

    Also the hanging corpse was looking at the soldier while pointing at the gory mess

  • @Quert_Zuiopue

    @Quert_Zuiopue

    Жыл бұрын

    Since the Hague convention, it doesn't matter if one is a friend or foe once they aren't a active combattant anymore. You help everyone in the amount you are possible to spend. (For sure, you help your fellows first, but if there is only a wounded ex enemy, you help him.

  • @PomptonII

    @PomptonII

    Жыл бұрын

    The lack of color in Dix. Goes so hard.

  • @asanoodle1164
    @asanoodle1164 Жыл бұрын

    "soldiers arent heroes, theyre victims." is such a perfect way to put that

  • @haruttatlyan3584

    @haruttatlyan3584

    Жыл бұрын

    They are heroes to some degree.

  • @gmailistrash4094

    @gmailistrash4094

    Жыл бұрын

    @@haruttatlyan3584 The term hero is subjective, hero to some and villain to others

  • @haruttatlyan3584

    @haruttatlyan3584

    Жыл бұрын

    @@gmailistrash4094 true but I was talking about soldiers mercy upon one another. Heroes.

  • @grawlixTV

    @grawlixTV

    Жыл бұрын

    @@haruttatlyan3584 a merciful soldier is a hypocrite

  • @haruttatlyan3584

    @haruttatlyan3584

    Жыл бұрын

    @@grawlixTV damn well. thats actually true. I dont think hypocrites, but more so incompetent workers.

  • @curiousworld7912
    @curiousworld79123 жыл бұрын

    As I understand it; Dix was a highly regarded painter in Germany before the war. Afterwards, his work became less naturalistic, and more expressionist. His prints and paintings of the war are indeed horrifying - but that's exactly what war is. There is little nobility, gallantry, or glory to it - it's an abattoir - and Dix clearly conveyed that reality, as had Goya a century before. And this is why I so appreciate Expressionist art: it tells the truth. Even uncomfortable truths.

  • @prospero4586
    @prospero45863 жыл бұрын

    I had the chance to see Der Krieg at my local museum in 2019, and I guarantee that those 50 artworks were quite difficult to watch, but it was great nonetheless.

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lucky you! I'd love to see these 50 prints reunited in one room! Thank you for sharing :)

  • @AyaJuni

    @AyaJuni

    Жыл бұрын

    I also saw his works in a museum in Germany. There were the most striking to me amongst all of the exibeted artwork. I went there with my class at this time, but they were uninterested of it seemed, or in art in gereneral. When I see his paintings I always hear a pice of music in my head. It is "hell" from worms armageddon. I am blessed and also cursed by a wild and deep imagination which make these scenes feel realy real to me, hence the impact it had on me. Thouse paintings carry a lot of emotinons and tragedy with them and I can deeply feel that.

  • @n8zog584

    @n8zog584

    Жыл бұрын

    Man that would have been quite the experience. I bet it was similar to visiting the atomic bomb museum in Hiroshima, which is something I had the opportunity to do. As an American, seeing that stuff was really had.

  • @JOSTadventures
    @JOSTadventures Жыл бұрын

    It's also crazy to consider that two artists participated in the Battle of Somme in 1916, for one who displayed the casualties of war in bold depictions of viscera and pronounced psychological trauma, and the other who so was deep into the fight he begged to not be removed from it. That same soldier-artist would display the former's artworks as "Degenerate Art" years later, in an environment he facilitated and repeated the same violence unto the world as the two had seen before.

  • @gabrielegenota1480

    @gabrielegenota1480

    Жыл бұрын

    yeah corporal hitler was very weird like that

  • @Some_random98

    @Some_random98

    Жыл бұрын

    It was degenerate And will be removed again

  • @gabrielegenota1480

    @gabrielegenota1480

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Some_random98 "Grrr... artistic expression. How dare people not be talentless hacks like me"

  • @denialty2660

    @denialty2660

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Some_random98 Right after you leave the sofa?

  • @Some_random98

    @Some_random98

    Жыл бұрын

    Ones who know nothing of the past are deaf to the future and slaves to there Shepard who leads them to slaughter Aka the idiots who responded

  • @blitz8221
    @blitz8221 Жыл бұрын

    It is so sad to see the great war being ignored by media. When they say 'the war' they think about the second world war. Though that was a horrific war too, it is important that we do not forget. Otto Dix captured that perfectly, even when the second world war hadn't begun. I would hope to see others recognize the great war, and all the others throughout history.

  • @SirRichard94

    @SirRichard94

    Жыл бұрын

    because ww2 was mobile, action packed and has clear enemies. ww1 was stagnant, with no clear heroes and villains. just a sink hole of missery. Which do you think sells better?

  • @nintendostyle3500

    @nintendostyle3500

    Жыл бұрын

    WW1 was more horrific for soldiers, ww2 was more horrific for the civilians

  • @mikloridden8276

    @mikloridden8276

    Жыл бұрын

    WW2 was extremely horrific for civilians. I can’t imagine minding my own business and some army from far away decides to flay you infront of your family for fun.

  • @41tl

    @41tl

    Жыл бұрын

    All Quiet On The Western Front has been remade for Netflix. Trailer just dropped. Between that, 1917(which was a really good movie), and Battlefield 1(which was a pretty good game) a few years back I think WWI is starting to get more recognition.

  • @mr.pickles810

    @mr.pickles810

    Жыл бұрын

    Y'all never heard of sarge. York. Or Maj. Whittlesey theres a few stories from the great war.

  • @owenrobison7071
    @owenrobison7071 Жыл бұрын

    I saw this comment from a album called "Everywhere at the end of time" and it states "The best depiction of art should comfort the disturbed and disturb the comfortable" and seeing how people painted their experiences and traumatic events from war and it shows what they felt and did, it's heartbreaking

  • @andrewkvk1707

    @andrewkvk1707

    Жыл бұрын

    Cesar A. Cruz

  • @heidiherndon3890

    @heidiherndon3890

    Жыл бұрын

    @Owen Robinson I wouldn’t say that’s the “The best” depiction of art but it is a way to depict art

  • @mattmccaslin3355

    @mattmccaslin3355

    Жыл бұрын

    That album, musically describing the gradual loss of memory from dementia, is one of the saddest and most chilling pieces of music I have ever heard.

  • @GDKF0238

    @GDKF0238

    Жыл бұрын

    The best depiction of art is the one that you think it is. There is no objectivity with art.

  • @svartkonst666
    @svartkonst666 Жыл бұрын

    I'm a Northern French and therefore many towns in the titles are very familiar to me. It is very disturbing to think how those names only meant suffering, atrocities and trauma for him.

  • @nedanother9382

    @nedanother9382

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing. As a person born and bred in the US I find it fascinating how anyone in Europe deals with it's history. Especially the aggressors. The places and buildings, towns like you said. SOOO many reminders and yet we all (most) walk today as friends and allies. Even the people ..how the French and Germans get along today. In my older years I have always been proud of our countries strength wealth and accomplishments. I feel even more prideful at our ability to move on - we had our own civil war, we wared with our allies in Germany and Japan, Vietnam and yet now they're our neighbors and friends now. Pretty amazing. makes us westerners pretty damn good people I'd say. Cheers to you in Northern France.

  • @serdownofhousebad1127

    @serdownofhousebad1127

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@nedanother9382 The U.S is just a walking war crime, idk why you'd be proud of thieves and murderers being the power of your country. Remember when you and France tested nukes in the Pacific and radiated a bunch of people living on those islands while your countries swore that you had no idea people lived in the areas you bombed

  • @serdownofhousebad1127

    @serdownofhousebad1127

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@nedanother9382 You westerners are barely good to your friends and you all clearly show just how vile you can all act. Western countries have influenced and supported wars in non western countries for years now and you act as if you're the good guys, just a bunch of glorified mobsters

  • @anarcho-savagery2097
    @anarcho-savagery2097 Жыл бұрын

    "War doesn't determine who's Right, Only Who's Left"

  • @nina241085

    @nina241085

    Жыл бұрын

    - Bertrand Russell

  • @anarcho-savagery2097

    @anarcho-savagery2097

    Жыл бұрын

    @@nina241085 thank you Anon

  • @jarate8076

    @jarate8076

    Жыл бұрын

    @@FrostRare this sounds really cringe why did you have to post this comment

  • @Matikz007

    @Matikz007

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jarate8076 lmao

  • @HowToEatChihuahua

    @HowToEatChihuahua

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@FrostRarehe wasn't talking about the political right or left in capitalism, you just misinterpreted the frase

  • @Richard_Lush
    @Richard_Lush Жыл бұрын

    Dix’s paintings of damaged soldiers begging and playing cards after the war are some of my favourites. The aftermath and how he presented it left an impression on me as a young man.

  • @You-youer

    @You-youer

    Жыл бұрын

    Read Remarque's «The Road Back». One of the best ways to feel what young boys have already felt.

  • @nilsniemeier5345
    @nilsniemeier5345 Жыл бұрын

    I think you missed the biggest artistic reference in Dix's "Der Krieg"--it's a parody of Matthias Grunewald's Isenheim Altarpiece triptych. The men in predella are lying in repose like the body of Christ lies in repose in Grunewald's painting. Furthermore, the bullet-riddled corpse with his feet sticking up in the central piece of the triptych looks very similar to the crucified Christ in the Isenheim Altarpiece with similar body wounds. And to add even further reference, the skeleton mockingly pointing at the dead man points in a manner similar to John the Baptist pointing at the crucified Christ in Grunewald's piece. So what you see here is Dix inverting a piece of art displaying God's redemption of mankind into a piece of art that shows utter human destruction from which there is no end or escape.

  • @CoolBlue1191

    @CoolBlue1191

    Жыл бұрын

    As well as the disembodied head of the man in the lower left corner bearing a crown of barbed wire similar in design to thorns.

  • @FOXHOUNDProductions91
    @FOXHOUNDProductions91 Жыл бұрын

    Another excellent WWI artist is someone name Paul Nash. I watched a 26 episode 1964 documentary series about WWI and discovered him by accident. Both his works and the quote that made me interested in him was, "Nash didn't simply see an explosion, the explosion took place, inside Nash."

  • @musikafossora

    @musikafossora

    Жыл бұрын

    what’s the documentary?

  • @philippschmitt4142
    @philippschmitt4142 Жыл бұрын

    I own a grapic novel Version of "all quiet on the Western front" with Dix's illustrations. Im very happy for him to get more recognition

  • @anzaiyuto2271
    @anzaiyuto2271 Жыл бұрын

    "soldiers aren't Heros, they are victims"

  • @colden9037
    @colden90373 жыл бұрын

    Wait this only has

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!!! I'm glad the amount of work that goes into these is recognized! It's very appreciated!

  • @celarvaa5109

    @celarvaa5109

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@TheCanvasArtHistory it's absolutely criminal that you don't have a million subscribers yet

  • @lewstone5430

    @lewstone5430

    Жыл бұрын

    It’s been a year and this comment section only has 48 comments, should have more. I just subscribed.

  • @krisonveloc25

    @krisonveloc25

    Жыл бұрын

    Now over 300K and 500 comment, good work

  • @powdereyes2210
    @powdereyes2210 Жыл бұрын

    10:54 if this man made it out alive and saw this art I think he'd be sorry to be a part of someone else's nightmare but grateful that he'd be remembered because of his work after so many decades

  • @abehme

    @abehme

    Жыл бұрын

    He didnt. He knows hes dying. Didnt you see the look on his face and the gigantic wound on his side? Theres no recovery from that in those times. I think that exact hopelessness is what Dix is trying to convey. There are no happy endings in war.

  • @powdereyes2210

    @powdereyes2210

    Жыл бұрын

    @@abehme I said IF he made it out alive

  • @BadgerOfTheSea
    @BadgerOfTheSea Жыл бұрын

    It is not a coincidence his artwork is often used as cover art for "All Quiet on the Western Front". Similarly to his art, that book tells a story of soldiers going off into the unknown only to be met with the horrific brutality of war in the trenches.

  • @DieNextInLINE
    @DieNextInLINE Жыл бұрын

    I remember my first time seeing Goya's war prints. I'd never had more than a passing interest in art. I thought of it as a talent that others simply had and could profit off of. Seeing Goya's works, I couldn't help but feel him saying "Look! Look, you idiots! This is what war is and does!" While being overwhelmingly frustrated at his inability to do anything to stop it but highlight it.

  • @kyleway8513
    @kyleway8513 Жыл бұрын

    Nocturnal Encounter With A Lunatic unnerves me, the image and title combine to evoke an almost primal fear

  • @therealsirdj5934
    @therealsirdj5934 Жыл бұрын

    "The Outpost In The Trenches Must Maintain The Bombardment at night" caught my eye immidiatly. We are in a trench, suraounded by seemingly nothing but death, destruction and chaos. From the viewers perspective it almost looks like we are observing the two only soldiers still alive, guarding what is the reminders of a trench, looking out for enemies, yet dispite all the distruction around them, we can't find out where it even came from. We can't see who the two men are fighting. You could interpret that 1. The two men are fighting a hopeless fight to win as it seems like the two are heavily outnumbered indicated by the damage done by the enemy or 2. that both are fighting a senseless war, as they are seemingly fighting over nothing, against only the night, with the moon being the only thing we can make out in the direction they point their rifles in.

  • @grapeapetape9132
    @grapeapetape9132 Жыл бұрын

    A few years ago my great uncle copied and (for the family only) published a booklet of some of my great grandad's sketches from WW1. He didn't draw anything gruesome or immediately distressing, but he did draw things like the makeshift graves of his friends, and the landscape just beyond the wire completely devastated.

  • @nospoon4799
    @nospoon4799 Жыл бұрын

    Dix. My favourite artist. He hid from nothing. The tryptych is just incredible. Not many can do this with mere paint and canvas. His work chills your bones. Thankyou. I would have liked to see some of his later work too.

  • @ZAINI25
    @ZAINI253 жыл бұрын

    So underrated it’s insane

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you Yousef!!

  • @RustyDustyArson
    @RustyDustyArson Жыл бұрын

    I usually never comment on videos but I think the whole thing at 5:19 can be so much scarier if you know that the first gasmasks (the ones that were used in ww1) weren't always airtight and that many soldiers died still on battlefield using gas because of that fact Besides that when it was or got windy many soldiers still died after the gas because the wind dragged it to their side of the battlefield so it was very likely that you die as a soldier in ww1 when anyone used gas Also im sorry if I butchered a sentence as English isn't my first language

  • @constantinboloban5429
    @constantinboloban5429 Жыл бұрын

    It seems I have not understood Otto Dix until 24th of February, when the war came into my house. Before, I used to find these images too grotesque, but now I see how realistic they are. In fact, nothing has really changed. The interesting thing is people studied war from pieces of art in the western culture, they mostly understood what people like Goya and Otto Dix told them, while in russia war is glorified, it is not about losses and fear there, but rather about the wish of violence and triumph

  • @urviechalex9963

    @urviechalex9963

    6 ай бұрын

    I wish you and your loved ones all the best!

  • @GravityTrash
    @GravityTrash Жыл бұрын

    The editing in this videos is incredible. The low ambient music accompanying the horrors of war suddenly cutting to a beautiful soundtrack with the fog painting, with the two alternating between the pieces is such an impressive detail. The jumpscare of the gasmask drawing is incredibly. I genuinely hope Art History teachers take a look at your work, because this is quite amazing

  • @IndustrialFan666
    @IndustrialFan666 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely devastating, I love this artist so much

  • @hylacinerea970
    @hylacinerea970 Жыл бұрын

    i had a pretty volatile early childhood, i was severely behind in development so when the state mandated i go to therapy the only way i could express myself was through “art”, that looked much like this. when i look at otto’s work i feel myself shrink back to that primordial state, dashing black crayon everywhere so hard i eventually snap it cleanly in two. this is a horror, or a disturbance i have not felt before

  • @dionysos739
    @dionysos739Ай бұрын

    This was phenomenal and made me cry. Thank you! Dix's "Sturmtruppe geht unter Gas vor" is my favorite piece of art of all time, and I never got to see all the other works of his on the topic of war. Thank you!

  • @sanaerachidi7509
    @sanaerachidi75093 жыл бұрын

    i'm about to binge watch all your videos , i'm so glad i came across your channel , your videos are AMAZING.

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Wow!! I'm so happy you enjoy my videos this much! Thank you so much Sanae :)

  • @worksv3
    @worksv3 Жыл бұрын

    ‘Wounded Soldier’ is the hardest one to look at. It’s the eyes. The eyes are terrifying. It’s what makes it more viscerally horrific than pieces like Guernica - there’s no symbolism. There’s no artistic commentary. It’s the eyes that don’t just stare - they pierce into yours.

  • @wiidlbeetle3857
    @wiidlbeetle3857 Жыл бұрын

    Very good video. I wasn’t aware of Dix. I’m so moved by the art I’m about to cry. I’ve never cried over an art piece before but this was the saddest thing I’ve ever seen portrayed in my life.

  • @BabyBoomerChannel
    @BabyBoomerChannel Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this. Awesome analysis and your oration is perfect.

  • @cataginandtonic
    @cataginandtonic Жыл бұрын

    Dix sketched a self-portrait in ink on a brown paper bag called 'Me as a Soldier' as a gift for the owner of his gallery. He portrayed his face as 3 lines - 2 eyes and a mouth - between his helmet and the collar of his tunic, the arms of which cradle a machine gun like a baby. It is a picture of a monster.

  • @gunnerpeterson6858
    @gunnerpeterson6858 Жыл бұрын

    The second panel of the Triptych to me illustrates the dissociation of the individual in war. The bodies blend into the background, only capturing the attention of the viewer through a mess of limbs. Even the observer is hidden under a mask.

  • @barbaricbri
    @barbaricbriАй бұрын

    This has easily become one of my favorite yt channels. Keep up the good work!

  • @ruurdm.fenenga2571
    @ruurdm.fenenga2571 Жыл бұрын

    Very well done! My compliments on this achievement and sharing your knowledge. Thank you.

  • @Prussian_Forever
    @Prussian_Forever Жыл бұрын

    I don't know how anyone could capture the horror and terror of the Great War. Otto Dix did an outstanding job of justifying the pain.

  • @OkieSketcher1949
    @OkieSketcher1949 Жыл бұрын

    The works shown emphasizes why my grandfather never talked about WWI and why my father never talked about WWII. The horrors stayed with them long after the wars ended. Very good presentation, but I may have trouble sleeping tonight. That is how it should be least we were to ever forget.

  • @Nikolai1939
    @Nikolai1939Ай бұрын

    The gasmask soldier amongst the dead bodies didn't wander into the scene, he lives in it, he's just sitting there, because soldiers lived amongst the dead in the trenches

  • @amp120voltage
    @amp120voltage Жыл бұрын

    I like how the images capture the things that affect the mind during critical incidents. Truly captures the peculiar things of PTSD or shell shock I’ve never had shell shock but I do have PTSD and the strange thing about it is the feelings they give about seemingly nothing. In contrast to some of the things I’ve seen (a mentally ill child drowning in blood, gunshot/puncture wounds, slashes/ deep cuts in flesh, (some of my own family members went through )) I was mostly affected by a fentanyl overdose of someone I barely knew. And I’m unclear why. But I do appreciate the art of the flare over the trenches because it captures the things the mind won’t release and for seemingly no reason. Truly and amazing artist and he captures the frustration of this very well.

  • @newknowledge1799
    @newknowledge1799Ай бұрын

    This is a seriously awesome video, thank you for this man

  • @crassiewassie8354
    @crassiewassie8354 Жыл бұрын

    8:37 to me the man in the gas mask looks more lost than he does in awe He looks like he's seeking the safety of his blanket to cope from the horror in front of him. Kinda like how war would turn many men into scared children seeking any comfort they can and such. idk I see a lot of innocence in him but that's just my own interpretation.

  • @natepolk9663
    @natepolk9663 Жыл бұрын

    I always thought that this level of pain, suffering, gore, decay and death was only able to be achieved in fiction (WR40K comes to mind) I find amazing (in a bad way) that this level of brutality can be achieved by us, something considered the Wrath of the gods in the 17th, 16th, 15th, century was a normal thing for soldiers on the 1900's, And all that was and is being achieved by us, by mere mortals, a line is crossed when is declared and the first world war pushed that line near its limits and the second pushed it even further. We know where the line is and it's up to us to make sure that line is never crossed again....

  • @maestroicarodecarvalho3947

    @maestroicarodecarvalho3947

    Жыл бұрын

    Although one little critic about 40k: it does exactly the opposite of Dix... the final result is the glorification of what dix so vehemently criticized

  • @painedkillerk9
    @painedkillerk9 Жыл бұрын

    These are some of the most incredibly haunting pieces Ive ever seen. Yet the strange beauty of them isnt lost either

  • @sebastianeklund2267
    @sebastianeklund22673 жыл бұрын

    Wow I absolutely loved this! I mean, not the subject matter, but the video. Thank you! Also, great editing!

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much Sebastian!!

  • @buskingkarma2503
    @buskingkarma2503 Жыл бұрын

    I'm blown away by some of these art works!

  • @AdamBorseti
    @AdamBorseti Жыл бұрын

    Fantastic and very thought-provoking video!

  • @ThatOneMan830
    @ThatOneMan830 Жыл бұрын

    Man I love when the YT algorithm ends up doing something good for once. Fantastic stuff. Subbed.

  • @maxbenson8900
    @maxbenson8900 Жыл бұрын

    One of my favorite artists getting some love

  • @fsll1575
    @fsll15752 жыл бұрын

    Wow, not even a year after your video, we are witnessing those horror once again. You almost quote almost word for word a friend of in the military : "La guerre se n'est pas joli"

  • @nightmaredude7518
    @nightmaredude7518 Жыл бұрын

    I have watched this video 5 times, and it's still entretaining

  • @lewstone5430
    @lewstone5430 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I studied WWI in college and saw many horrible pictures but these drawings were worse yet also brilliant.

  • @luckyboyyt8582
    @luckyboyyt8582 Жыл бұрын

    This is one of the most powerful art documentaries I have seen.

  • @shikawgoh
    @shikawgoh2 жыл бұрын

    I think this video is very well done describing and showing how Dix was able to paint and convey the horrors of World War I and what he saw there. That being said, I’m a little surprised the video didn’t mention or show his post war paintings. In some ways they’re even more devastating considering their portrayal of veterans who are often physically and mentally scarred trying to reenter a society that either doesn’t know about or care about the horrors they saw and went through; as well as allusions to some folks who profited from the war while the soldiers were just used and spit out. Some really amazing antiwar social commentary from a time period (1920’s) when that was hardly commonplace.

  • @wollibar5263
    @wollibar5263 Жыл бұрын

    Great video on an great artist and a great human - thank you very much.

  • @StarWolfAL
    @StarWolfALАй бұрын

    Fantastic video! I love Dix’s work. I studied it a bit last semester in a class on monstrosity and horror throughout history. This semester I took a class on WWI, and couldn’t help but think of Der Krieg by Otto Dix.

  • @mikann9441
    @mikann9441 Жыл бұрын

    Just saw Der Krieg in Dresden last week. Absolutely harrowing… the scale of the painting really makes it so much more impactful. I recommend everyone to see it in real life, it’s incredible.

  • @modernmajorgeneral4669
    @modernmajorgeneral4669 Жыл бұрын

    Sadly, so many people have suffered through war, and so many people have shown what terrible atrocities against humanity have happened as a result of war, and yet even more people have always called for war. It really is a great tragedy; not one of glory now past, but one where there was no glory to begin with. Otto Dix, and many others like him, are simply akin to theater critics giving a synopsis of a play. Thank you for reading my philosophy.

  • @sirsteam6455

    @sirsteam6455

    Жыл бұрын

    Though war is a product of Nature and of the Human condition, War happens because of atrocities and injustices, it does not exist without prompt and when it does it repeats the cycle

  • @perlefisker
    @perlefisker Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this video. These engravings were new to me. They remind me of those of Goya from the Napoleonic Wars in Spain, which I saw in Zaragoza where they made a huge impression. The grotesque inhumanity was the same - a hundred years previous to WW1, and a hundred years past that, it's still the same. The cruelty humans inflict on other humans is unfathomable - and apparently nothing changes there.

  • @AntiThotPatrol
    @AntiThotPatrol Жыл бұрын

    To be honest, if the paintings creep us out… imagine what Dix saw during the Battle of the Somme or the Kasierschlatt in person… which were some of the bloodiest battles of World War One. You can really tell that what he saw was pretty much hell.

  • @anapatriciaponcecastaneda3345
    @anapatriciaponcecastaneda33452 жыл бұрын

    Great video!!

  • @sky44david
    @sky44david Жыл бұрын

    This is the most excellent in depth consideration of how personal participation or observation of the brutality of war becomes the inspiration for skilled complex narratives in art. I have an understanding of the phase "the fog of war" as I functioned as a LRRP, 82nd Airborne Division of the Army, 1965-70: After each operation there is a "debriefing" and it was almost always "What you saw, didn't happen". The chaotic mix of "didn't happen" events arises after the events when one is supposed to be a well functioning member of society. I remember the phase "For V-Vet Andy and His Heart Attacks Because He Couldn't Speak and Nobody Would Listen Anyway" that is the title of an art work by the Native American Artist Rick Bartow (presently deceased). About 30 years after the experiences that chaotic mix expressed itself in my hand drawn animation (FIELD OF GREEN: A SOLDIERS ANIMATED SKETCHBOOK) and many drawings that attempt to recreate a sketchbook diary from the late 1960's. Thanks for the depth and sensitivity of this consideration.

  • @hawk0485
    @hawk04853 жыл бұрын

    The paintings are so varied, "Wounded Man" looks almost as if it was taken from Akira (the japanese film). It's all very hard to look at. Brings back memories of reading "All Quiet on the Western Front" by Remarque. 5:18 that's an interesting observation, it shows a great deal of empathy. The way you tie it togather with Goya is also very interesting. Whenever I see those Goya eyes, I feel like I'm gonna lose my mind. Scary stuff. PS: this is what I mean with the comparison to Akira, it's remarkable: kzread.info/dash/bejne/qKNmuo-Mm6Swfbg.html (10:54 in your video)

  • @JH-lo9ut

    @JH-lo9ut

    Жыл бұрын

    Hard to look at indeed. Otto Dix also made a series of portraits that are a study of veterans with damaged faces. Those portraits feel like cold needles to your spine. Still, they are immensely human, respectful and tender in a very strange way. Dix really took his time and watched these men with all their gruesome wounds. You can see it in their eyes that these men are grateful that someone would actually dare to look at them, when most couldn't stomach it.

  • @aotoda486
    @aotoda4863 жыл бұрын

    11:45 this quote reminds me very much of Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse-5, and I draw parallels between Dix's and Pilgrim's eventual "compliance" or "acquiescence" with this supposed fundamental of humanity (which of course Vonnegut heavily railed against).

  • @gypsydildopunks7083
    @gypsydildopunks7083 Жыл бұрын

    Thanks for the video

  • @gerryleb8575
    @gerryleb8575 Жыл бұрын

    The tragedy of the Great War, exemplified by Dix's work, is the tragedy of our civilization self-destructing. Thank you for this brilliant video.

  • @lathron4393
    @lathron4393 Жыл бұрын

    I life near the city witch has a his work and Der Krieg in the museum. I still remember seeing this Painting as a small child and always running back to look at it again, he left a so enormous Impression on me, in my thinking and in my art that I will always be grateful for his art (but ˋm terrible sorry that he had to see such horrible things)

  • @jolioding_2253
    @jolioding_2253 Жыл бұрын

    We talked about his paintings In our History advanced class when we were also showed video captures of shellshocked veterans. It was hard to watch but it made talking about the first world war more personal and 'real' if you know what i mean. Art is a great way to really show what is going on in people's lives even if they're long gone

  • @meisterslx
    @meisterslx Жыл бұрын

    Brilliant. I saw Dix's works first in 2014 in Erlangen, Germany. The biennal Comic Salon in Erlangen featured many examples of graphic art about WWI which started 100 years earlier in their exhibitions. No other artist there could compete with Otto Dix. Since then, he has been one of my most admired depictors of war. To me, he is for painting and art what Remarque (who wrote All Quiet on the Western Front) is to literature.

  • @lindorplays5900
    @lindorplays5900 Жыл бұрын

    Dix also painted another one of my favorits: "Les Joueurs de Skat" portraying wouded sodiers playing cards. Its unusually dense, he didn't only use paint but did a sort of collage of newspapers,wraps, metal etc.

  • @martoro8763
    @martoro8763 Жыл бұрын

    a very interesting video good job with the edetting and explaining of the images

  • @PHERGUSberger-lk5dp
    @PHERGUSberger-lk5dp29 күн бұрын

    Otto Dix had a way of making the vision of war's horror as equally brutal if not more so than the ability of men like Wilfred Owen and Seigfried Sassoon to put same into words and poems. Some of the best poetry and writings came from survivors of the great war. And so many more perished that we may never know their greatness.

  • @zombiesalmon4997
    @zombiesalmon4997 Жыл бұрын

    Went to see some of this dudes art on display in a museum where i live. They’re quite small pieces but its actually quite jarring to see them in person

  • @cht2162
    @cht21629 ай бұрын

    Speechless.

  • @JWvdv
    @JWvdv Жыл бұрын

    8:02 to me it looks more like the soldier is sitting in the trench where all the carnage happend. He has a blanket /tarp wrapped around him to protect him more from rain and mud. To me this makes it even more horrific since he has to stay inbetween al this carnage

  • @RAAM855

    @RAAM855

    Жыл бұрын

    to me he looks content like sitting next to such a horrible putrid sight is normal. we the viewer are shocked and appalled but he's sitting there "cozy" like he's done this dozens of times he's so desensitized.

  • @bigjj1109
    @bigjj1109 Жыл бұрын

    What brillant art history and comparison "soldiers are victims not heroes" what truth!

  • @spudpud-T67
    @spudpud-T67 Жыл бұрын

    Great presentation.

  • @powdereyes2210
    @powdereyes2210 Жыл бұрын

    11:12 it's terrifying that the dead look more alive than him

  • @Zizumia
    @Zizumia Жыл бұрын

    The Der Krieg prints remind me of this anti war book my grandfather owned. It was published in the 30s and it contained hundreds of gruesome photographs showing the horrors of WWI.

  • @davidgutierrez1729
    @davidgutierrez1729 Жыл бұрын

    My favorite artist

  • @grid4359
    @grid4359 Жыл бұрын

    Amazing video

  • @maneatdog1343
    @maneatdog13433 жыл бұрын

    Great stuff keep it up

  • @TheCanvasArtHistory

    @TheCanvasArtHistory

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @spaceman8994
    @spaceman8994 Жыл бұрын

    Ah yes, just what I need in 2022. Thanks a lot, KZread!

  • @sanketsudke2617
    @sanketsudke261710 ай бұрын

    Wonderful video

  • @babbybailey2534
    @babbybailey2534Ай бұрын

    Dark and deep. Moving.

  • @grzybekgrzesio5759
    @grzybekgrzesio5759 Жыл бұрын

    0:42 i think i know some oposition: "war, war never changes" ~some dude fallout 4

  • @warandpoetry9542
    @warandpoetry9542 Жыл бұрын

    7:35 the hunches over body also has a wreath of barbed wire around his head, reminiscent of Christ’s crown of thorns, possibly symbolising how in war, even God seems to be dead

  • @uraniumbolt7594

    @uraniumbolt7594

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm so glad someone else caught that detail. The sudden realization in such a horrific fashion made me stop the video from being overwhelmed

  • @planterstoner1918
    @planterstoner1918 Жыл бұрын

    Saw a gallery of his in Montreal a while go. The first large room was just wall to wall his drawings from the trenches. It was Unreal.

  • @ernestov1777
    @ernestov17775 ай бұрын

    I watched this at night and i cried looking at this art. If pain and suffering could be drawn it would be this. Rest in eternal peace to all those who perished in WW1.

  • @corkcamden9878
    @corkcamden9878 Жыл бұрын

    Instead of rushing through his works, why don't you turn this into a two part or simply a single documentary? It would be a big hit! Very intense, sir!

  • @Kerwin-Kendell
    @Kerwin-Kendell Жыл бұрын

    Inspiring upload about this artist & the subject. Food for thought is the least of what can be said about the artwork & it's subject 🍸

  • @BloodylocksBathory
    @BloodylocksBathory Жыл бұрын

    The description of Otto Dix's message, "war is ugly, war is shameful, soldiers are victims" and so on brings to mind the works of Tomas Lea and others during the Second World War. Once again the disturbing images are painted from firsthand experience and grab one's attention immediately. Unfortunately most of the art of more recent conflicts are back to glorifying the war and depicting soldiers as impenetrable superheroes, not that there aren't artists communicating the horror (Franciszek C. Kulon and Mircea Suciu, for example), but it seems people would rather refuse to acknowledge the truth. Hopefully I'm wrong, and if anyone can think of other contemporary artists who don't glorify war, I would be glad to hear about them.

  • @Harshit_narnoli
    @Harshit_narnoli3 жыл бұрын

    @8:00 and onwards, I am just thinking with the current Covid-19 scenario, the masked man as a doctor and battlefield as a hospital with patients fighting for their lives, transcending to tragic and traumatic death due to lack of oxygen and failing immunity! Its astounding how art can trump time and context and trigger inner conscience to relate ones personal experiences with the emotions displayed. I am not an art critic, certainly not an expert.. I am studying architecture, academia introduced me to fine arts.. Loving your curation and presentation.. been more than 3 hours looking and learning from your videos!! Keep up the great work :) Appreciation from India. Hope you and your family is safe!

  • @leotamangiaracina9494
    @leotamangiaracina9494 Жыл бұрын

    Hello, I have been following this channel for a long time. I am very interested in these videos introducing art works. This kind of video increases my knowledge and helps me learn English. Your speaking speed and pronunciation are suitable for listening practice. You can also follow the video. I'm glad I can find such a channel. Thank you🥰

  • @Lionkingview
    @Lionkingview Жыл бұрын

    I'm giving a presentation on exptressionism tommorow (mostly literature tho with a few words towards art,musik and film)and this video gave me a few more thoughts on the art side of the the subject

  • @mastr-sf1jv
    @mastr-sf1jv Жыл бұрын

    I loved the elaboration "as if death was orchestrating it"

  • @congruentcrib
    @congruentcrib Жыл бұрын

    One of my favorites shown here is “Ration Carrying Near Pilkem”. At the bottom we have soldiers crawling on all fours, hunched over like some feral animal; as you look past that you see it get lighter and lighter, until you see the sun. The sun radiates light with such bold solid lines. With its stark contrast, it almost appears otherworldly, or even heavenly. On your journey up to that, you can’t help but notice a human skull or a skeletonized upper half of someone. Almost as if to say “death is the only way to heaven”. This shows the stages of life in war; first monsters, then death, and finally peace in heaven above.

  • @andrestand1
    @andrestand1 Жыл бұрын

    Awsome video

  • @legomanc4555
    @legomanc4555 Жыл бұрын

    Just found your channel, Its amazing so far and I just sent one of your videos to a good friend. I just wanted to comment that I totally thought you were going to say "War, war never changes." at the start, I play too much fallout.