Student Work

 

“Then I am Praying”: War, Religion, and Shared Suffering in the Pechstein and Kollwitz Prints at the University of Cincinnati Art Collection Acceso Abierto Deposited

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Date Uploaded: 04/07/2022
Date Modified: 04/26/2022

The University of Cincinnati Art Collection houses prints by two early 20th century German Expressionist printmakers, Max Pechstein (1881-1955) and Käthe Kollwitz (1867-1945). Pechstein’s Das Vater Unser (The Lord’s Prayer) series (1921) originally a portfolio of twelve, is represented in the University of Cincinnati Art Collection with nine of the bold woodcut prints. Kollwitz’s small postcard lithographs, Two Chatting Women with Two Children (c. 1930) and The Hospital Visit (c. 1926), are intimate and show the artists soft touch. Though formally very different, these prints share a common subject, the suffering of Germans during the interwar period (1918-1939). Both artists personally experienced both World Wars and their tragedies, and while Pechstein rarely addressed it directly, Kollwitz’s career was full of her antiwar sentiments. The prints grapple with the grief, political turmoil, and financial difficulties associated with the interwar period and each artist turns to their own form of religion to exercise their pain.

Creador
Licencia
Tema
Periodo de tiempo
  • 20th century
Presentador
Colegio
Departamento
Grado
  • Bachelor of Art History, BA
Fecha de creacion
Tutor
  • Christopher Platts
Idioma

Elementos

Enlace permanente a esta página: https://scholar.uc.edu/show/6969z260c