Top-Rated Free Essay
Preview

Degenerate Art

Powerful Essays
1425 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Degenerate Art
Degenerate Art:
Art in Post WWI Germany

Alex Shin
College Writing
Mrs. Shorter
February 25, 2013
Word Count: 1316

Degenerate Art: Art in Post WWI Germany
Paintings, photographs, music, movies, and writing: what unites these together? Not only do they each hold their own specific art category, but they are all various forms of communication. Although many of the items noted are not direct forms of an exchange like speech, they still have the ability to convey a powerful message with ease. Hitler, who was known to be a master at speaking, quickly understood how important paintings and other forms of art could have influenced the general population. Noticing the threat to his reign as chancellor, he quickly went around his homeland and did his best to disturb the image of an already controversial art. He achieved this through the gathering of paintings from all over the country and either crudely displayed them, selling them, or simply destroying them. Blinded by his own prejudice of what art should appear and convey, he only accepted art that was before the impressionist period. In the eyes of the great Fuhrer this was the only proper art. This essay will show how the Nazi party in post World War One dealt with art that did not fit their political agenda.
Figure 1. Painting made by Hitler. (Google)

Art Styles
In the early 1930s Hitler, who now headed the Nazi party in Germany, was in a position to force his specific tastes in art on the public. As an artist himself he favored art styles from the neoclassical, romanticist, and realistic periods, which tended to be very humanistic and defined. His art preferences could have easily influenced his beliefs in the Aryan race. The Aryan people could only lay its eyes upon art that would exemplify a perfect people. The art that Hitler relentlessly persecuted was distinctively different. The styles of art he did not appreciate are known collectively as modern art. These styles (impressionism, fauvism, expressionism, cubism, constructivism, dada, and surrealism) were abstract and did not have a particular flow to them (picture below). This kind of art would lead the observer to reflect and hypothesize about its meaning. Hitler, who had an extreme distaste for this art, proposed that the art was foul and would stain an individual’s life (The Greatest Theft). By the end of Hitler’s reign, he completely altered the nation’s liberal arts culture. Germany at the time was one of the leading countries in the arts. By effectively degrading modern art, Hitler can now transfer his hatred of modern art to the Jewish race.

Figure 2. Unknown title by Max Ernest. (Prezi)

The Purge
From the time Hitler first took a stance against modern art, the Nazi party continued to expose the German population to propaganda criticizing it, and by 1933 most of German began to hate degenerate art. When the time came, Hitler began his next move with a speech in which he said, “We will from now on lead an unrelenting war on purification, an unrelenting war on extermination against the last forces which have displaced our art (The Greatest Theft.)” In the year of 1937, Hitler, who became the chancellor of Germany in 1934, gave an order for all modern art in museums to give up all degenerate art. By the end of the purge, about 16000 works of art were takes from various museums around the nation (Mike Burhger). Some of the works included were created by renowned artists such as, Matisse, Van Gogh, and Picasso. Of the works Hitler collected they were sometimes auctioned off to rich collectors or burned for solider demonstrations of the 16000 pieces that he collected, only 650 remained at the end of the purge (The Greatest Theft).
Entartete Kunst
Instead of getting rid of all 16000 pieces of art, Hitler had other things in mind. With the remaining 650, he created an exhibition on degenerate art called Entartete Kunst. Entartete Kunst, otherwise known as Degenerate Art, was first opened on July 18th, 1937 in Munich, Germany (Mike Burhger). The whole exhibit’s purpose was not to show the people good art but to show the horrors of degenerate art. This exhibit only further accomplished Hitler’s goal to exterminate modern art. When German citizens walked in the exhibit, they only saw a painting of a degenerate person. The Entartete Kunst was a traveling exhibit that was run for about four years and visited around three million people. The exhibit was crudely set up with the intention of setting an uncomfortable feeling. Pictures were crowded together and put up on a burlap wall with no frame. Walls were plastered the phrase degenerate art and “smeared with graffiti to ridicule [the] art as a product of sick minds and an insult to women. (Entartete Kunst)”
The Nazi Artist
As stated before, Hitler was an actual artist. Jonathan Petripoulos, a historian in the documentary The Greatest Theft in History, said “Hitler was only a mediocre painter”. His hate for degenerate could have possibly come from his rejection from an art school in Vienna. Hitler Was rejected from the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna (The Greatest). Hitler did not approve of modern art as some artists were known for. The fact was these artists were Jewish too. So when Hitler applied and was rejected by a group of juror that included a Jewish population, he began to see the modern art as degenerate. Because most of his misfortune seemed to involve the Jewish race, he started to think of them as corrupted and immoral. He made fallible facts about how modern art was created by a wicked Jewish population that could not see colors or forms as they were in nature. Because of this, Hitler found that Jewish population was in fact inferior to him. This could have triggered the perfect Aryan race in his mind. The painting (Figure two) from Max Ernst that shows what the contemporary art looked like in the eyes of the Fuehrer. He would think that the artist of this particular piece could not see the difference between an actual bird and the look-a-like draw on the canvas.
Effect on People
When Hitler founded the National Socialist Party, or the Nazi Party, in 1933, the Party quickly began to take control of the German art scene. Any art that did not conform to Hitler’s high standards were labeled as degenerate; this was any art that was seen as inferior or seen as mentally or morally weak. Artists that were labeled as degenerate faced a variety of consequences such as persecution from citizens and prohibition of making any kind of art (The Greatest Theft). They were not even allowed to draw for themselves, all paintings had to be stopped or the artists would be arrested. Art teachers were fired, exhibiting artists were no longer allowed to display art, the creators were replaced, and some were even banned from creating any art at all. The German artists had is worse than any others who were labeled as unacceptable by Hitler. These German artists were a threat to other nations and rejected by their own country as well. But most wanted to exile themselves, while some artists simply left the country, others were trapped in their own country. Eventually, the stress was so much that some even committed suicide. Other than those that committed suicide, ex-painters now had to find new jobs to keep on living. Some painters were hired by the army to camouflage barracks from the enemy. Some painted labels on factories and trucks, and others that could not find a way to continue painting got new jobs to make a living (Mike Burhger).
Power of Art
This is the unknown world of art that play a considerable role in shaping and guiding Hitler and the Nazi regime. The fact is that art is a powerful communicator among the public, in such a way that it can cause a whole world war to occur.

References
Burhger, M. Degenerate Art: 1937 …. Germany. Tripod. Retrieved from http://burgher-art-facts.tripod.com/degenerate_art.html
College of Liberal Arts in San Luis Obispo. Entartete Kunst: Degenerate art. Cal Poly. Retrieved from http://cla.calpoly.edu/~mriedlsp/History437/Art/Entartete%20Kunst.htm
Piehl, S. (September 14, 2012). Degenerate Art in WWII. Prezi. Retrieved from http://prezi.com/d3ej3-dwg94r/degenerate-art-in-wwii/
Robert M. Edsel (Producer). (2009). The Greatest Theft in History [Educational DVD]. Retrieved from http://www.greatesttheft.com/lessonplan.php?id=1.

References: Burhger, M. Degenerate Art: 1937 …. Germany. Tripod. Retrieved from http://burgher-art-facts.tripod.com/degenerate_art.html College of Liberal Arts in San Luis Obispo. Entartete Kunst: Degenerate art. Cal Poly. Retrieved from http://cla.calpoly.edu/~mriedlsp/History437/Art/Entartete%20Kunst.htm Piehl, S. (September 14, 2012). Degenerate Art in WWII. Prezi. Retrieved from http://prezi.com/d3ej3-dwg94r/degenerate-art-in-wwii/ Robert M. Edsel (Producer). (2009). The Greatest Theft in History [Educational DVD]. Retrieved from http://www.greatesttheft.com/lessonplan.php?id=1.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Surrealist Art

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages

    The early 20th century is known for its systematic deflation of the traditional rules of Western art. Artists of this era overthrew long held conventions in a series of movements, all arising before 1920. For example Cubists created new styles of composition in painting as well as sculpture. Fauvists and Expressionists attacked traditional notions of pictorial representations through brushwork and bright colors. This is referred to as the style of abstraction. Abstract Expressionists attempted to reconstruct this style of art as a result of the major changes that were happening worldwide. The early 20th century was a dark time for Western civilization especially. In the time of World War I as well as World War II, many artists gave their art a deeper social significance. Most European artists in the immediate postwar period used their art to come to terms in some ways with what they had experienced. There were two primary ways that artists went about their art during this time; some enjoyed the aspect of figural styles while others proposed abstract art (Stokstad 1128).…

    • 653 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    For its first annual “ Forum” exhibition in 1917, Marcel Duchamp was the leading figure for displaying art for the, “American Society of Independent Artists” committee. Most significant, he anonymously submitted a work of art that would be so shocking and offensive…

    • 327 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    *Nazi message was successfully communicated through art, music, theater, films, books, radio, educational materials, and the press.…

    • 712 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    ART 101 Week 5 DQ

    • 656 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Discuss how art was used as a vehicle for propaganda, and whether such use is present in the works of Höch, Grosz, and Picasso. Use one example from Gardner's Art through the Ages and one from the Internet.…

    • 656 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Johannes Vermeer

    • 1541 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Barron, Stephanie. "1937 Modern Art and Politics in Prewar Germany." "Degenerate Art" The Fate of the Avant-Garde in Nazi Germany. Ed. Stephanie Barron. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1991. 9-22. Print.…

    • 1541 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Essay On Albert Speer

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages

    On the back of this development that saw architects in Europe questioning this reliance on the past for artistic inspiration, was the resurgence of pan- German nationalism. (Individuals in Modern History : Leni Riefenstahl & Albert Speer, Frappell, 2002, pg. 61-62) It is through this renaissance movement that saw architecture becoming a significant part of Nazi propaganda, despite the initial Nazi concept of “blunt und boden” which characterised the debate over “the city versus the country”. Like the great states in antiquity, Hitler wanted the stone ruins of Nazism to be a reminder a thousand years into the future of the grandeur of National Socialism. (Albert Speer - Personality Study, Kelly, 2012, pg. 15) Speer helped fulfil Hitler’s desires in his early work in the Nazi Party by impressing Hitler with his May Day rally and Nuremberg Rally designs that saw the strong incorporation of monumental neo-Classical features. Speer noted that the iron and steel reinforcement used in modern buildings, ultimately made a building look unattractive when it deteriorated. Speer felt that…

    • 612 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nazi Study Guide

    • 2002 Words
    • 9 Pages

    Artist- creativity. One should embellish on this more, that art went beyond creativity and was the basis of nation building, and much of the foundation of Nazi ideology.…

    • 2002 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bibliography: * German History in Documents and Images. Volume 6, Weimar Germany, 1918/19 – 1933. Adolf Hitler, "Appeal to the German People" (January 31, 1933).…

    • 1094 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Orientalism: Edward W. Said, post-collonail studies / Odalisque: exotic, erotic subjects like the harem girl(turkish word); redining or recumbent,female nude; recurrent figure throuhout Western Art/ Die Bruke-The Bridge: 1905-ernst cuding kirchner (dissolved in 1913); earlliest German group to seize the avant-garde spirit; means “bridge”-members believed their work would be a bridge to the future; artists lived and worked communally producing intense, anguished pictures with harshly distorted forms and clashing colors/ Primitive: the way one culture views another/Favism: 1904-08; discovered African and South Pacific sculpture (fauves); intense, bright, clashing colors; disturted forms and perspective; rigorous brushstrokes; flat, linear pattens; bare canvas as part of overall design; “mild beats”/ Art Noueau: flourished between 1890 and WWI; international ornamental style opposed to the sterility of the industrial age; reliedipun turning, flowering forms to counter the unaestheic look of mach, he-made products; sinuous lines and tendril like curves; tradeworks water lily shape exerted a peruastive influence on the applied arts auch as wrought- iron work, jewelry, glass, and typography/ Vienna Secessionist: arts who decided they needed a new place to show; viennase artist…

    • 1019 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Art, in itself, is an attempt to bring out order in chaos”. This can not happen when the chaos itself is destroying precious works of art. The Rape of Europa, is a documentary during the time of Nazi Germany; describing the atrocities the nazis are committing, from destroying works of art to auctioning to fund their cause. Adolf Hitler, has committed numerous crimes against humanity, but he has also committed a crime that can never be undone. The crime that he is guilty of is, destroying works of art that represents cultures from different areas and time periods. Furthermore, the works of art that were destroyed during this time will never be seen ever again; the Nazis have robbed future generations chance for knowledge of these paintings.…

    • 543 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adolph Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in January 1933 and his power depended upon propaganda for the Nazi's and terror. This essay will attempt to show how the Nazis used fear and propaganda to sustain power during the 1930s.…

    • 730 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Otto Dix

    • 2227 Words
    • 9 Pages

    How does one depict art? Art has been around since the dawn of man. A form of self-expression, a way to creatively put down ones ideals in hopes of creating a masterpiece, and where ever there has been art there has been an artist. In society the artist is a very important person able to utilize his work and make the people think and question the higher power. Out of the entire artistic association of the world and over the entire timeline of history one has stood out to me. A man who essentially went to hell and back, a man who put what he saw down so that he could warn others of the tragedies of the World War One world. Scarred for life and haunted by flash-backs of the killings; the brutality, the rapes, and the utter destruction of whole towns and cities Otto Dix struggled to remake these memories onto his art. Dix as an artist was not only influenced by World War One but as a true artist Dix in return changed the view of war to all peoples forever.…

    • 2227 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adolf Hitler

    • 426 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Adolph Hitler and Hermann Goering were dominant, pitiless leaders that were obsessed with art. As Edward Dolnick quoted Goering “I love art for art’s sake”. Hitler aspired to be painter, and applied to an art school in Vienna, but was rejected as mentioned in “rape of Europa”. According to rape of Europa, this perturbed Hitler because abstract modernists were accepted over him and generally Hitler hated what was going on in modern art. The fact that he has been dismissed from Vienna art school in favor of abstract and modern styles grew his hatred more for modern paintings as talked in Barron and rape of Europa. He hated modern art because of its abstract figures, shapes of the figures and its undefined lines. Hitler wants art that represented the Aryan nation that is from Europe descent. In the “forgers spell”, Dolnick adds that Hitler fantasized to build an art museum in his hometown of Linz, Austria (51). Baron says Hitler wanted to prove to the world that he was powerful. He demonstrated this by filling up his museum with the most valuable paintings in Europe.…

    • 426 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Triumph of the Will Essay

    • 1729 Words
    • 7 Pages

    The 1930s and 1940s, which saw the rise of totalitarian states and the Second World War, are arguably the "Golden Age of Propaganda". Nazi control of the German film industry, operated by the Reich Ministry for People 's Enlightenment and Propaganda headed by Joseph Goebbels is the most extreme example of the use of film in the service of a dictatorship. In this context the figure of Leni Riefenstahl, who was considered to be Adolf Hitler 's favorite film director, was one of the most discussed, criticized and celebrated, protagonist of a controversy that still today remains unsolved. This essay wants to be an analysis of her best-known propaganda movie, ' '‪Triumph of the Will‬ ' ', commissioned by Hitler to chronicle the 1934 Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg , and of the intentions behind its production.…

    • 1729 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Nazi Germany (also known as the Third Reich) was a period in time from 1933-1945. This was when Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party (NSDAP) dictated Germany. Under his rule the country became a totalitarian state. One of the main features of the regime was promoting anti-Semitic and pro- Aryan views. One of the strongest methods the Nazi’s used was propaganda in order to get many to support their views. This source-based essay shall explore the methods that the Nazi’s used to indoctrinate the youth such as the use of books, youth groups, education, movies, songs and posters in order to get the youth to support Nazi ideals.…

    • 1592 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays