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Look at the people!

The New Objectivity “Type” Portrait in the Weimar Period


  • Hatje Cantz (T&H)
  • expo : 02/12/2023 - 14/04/2024, Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
  • by Ulrike Groos, Anja Richter, Jan Bürger, Alina Grehl, Anna Katharina Hahn, Christin Hansen, Erik Koenen, Nadine Metzger, Anne Vieth, Nils Warnecke
Searching for the Face of a New Time. Whether in the visual arts, literature, cinema, science or fashion-in the crises after World War I, the fascination with "types" was largely influenced by a debate that was pervasive in the Weimar period: the search for the "face of the era." People were looking for new role models, and the portraits by artists of the New Objectivity movement such as Otto Dix, George Grosz, Jeanne Mammen and Hanna Nagel testify to this.

ISBN 9783775756006 | EN-GE | HB
€68,50
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Publisher Hatje Cantz (T&H)
ISBN 9783775756006
Author(s) Ulrike Groos, Anja Richter, Jan Bürger, Alina Grehl, Anna Katharina Hahn, Christin Hansen, Erik Koenen, Nadine Metzger, Anne Vieth, Nils Warnecke
Publication date December 2023
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 300 x 225 mm
Illustrations 230 col. & bw ill.
Pages 304
Language(s) Eng/ Germ. edition
Exhibition Kunstmuseum Stuttgart
Description

Searching for the Face of a New Time.

Whether in the visual arts, literature, cinema, science or fashion-in the crises after World War I, the fascination with "types" was largely influenced by a debate that was pervasive in the Weimar period: the search for the "face of the era." People were looking for new role models, and the portraits by artists of the New Objectivity movement such as Otto Dix, George Grosz, Jeanne Mammen and Hanna Nagel testify to this. Many of the clichéd images, such as those of the "new woman" or the "worker," however, continue to have an effect in the present, reminding us with their classification of individuals of a problem that lives on in today's bigotry.

A broad spectrum of contributors from art history, medical history, media studies, and sociology venture into a detailed investigation of the historical context of the 1920s and the complex interactions between art and its time. An installation developed especially for the exhibition by contemporary artist Cemile Sahin, born in 1990, spans an arc to the present.