
Children postcard, Junín, Mendoza, Argentina, 1923 / via argentinavintage-blog
images that haunt us

Children postcard, Junín, Mendoza, Argentina, 1923 / via argentinavintage-blog

Myron Davis :: The Pleasures of a Boy and His Dog, Sept. 3, 1945. According to LIFE, “Summer is the time when Larry Jim Holm and Dunk can be together all day long. Larry is 12 years old and lives on a farm in Oskaloosa, Iowa. Dunk is 18 monhts old and is part spaniel, part collie. Sometimes there are chores to do but most of their time is for fun.” (The LIFE Picture Collection / Getty Images) / via LIFE

Children swimming in Inwood Park pool, Cincinnati, Ohio, undated
/ via back-then / source: The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County http://ift.tt/2vemIMk


Portraying a Nation, which exhibits Dix and Sander as a pair for the first time, reflects a pivotal point in Germany’s history, as it introduced democratic rule in the aftermath of the First World War. The period was one of experimentation and innovation across the visual arts, during which both artists were concerned with representing the extremes of society, from the flourishing cabaret culture to intense poverty and civilian rebellions.
Featuring more than 300 paintings, drawings, prints and photographs, Portraying a Nation unites two complementary exhibitions. Otto Dix: The Evil Eye explores Dix’s harshly realistic depictions of German society and the brutality of war, while ARTIST ROOMS: August Sander presents photographs from Sander’s best known series People of the Twentieth Century, from the ARTIST ROOMS collection of international modern and contemporary art.
The exhibition focusses on the evolution of Dix’s work during his years in Düsseldorf, from 1922 to 1925, when he became one of the foremost New Objectivity painters, a movement exploring a new style of artistic representation following the First World War. Dix’s paintings are vitriolic reflections on German society, commenting on the country’s stark divisions. His work represents the people who made up these contradictions in society with highlights including Portrait of the Photographer Hugo Erfurth with Dog 1923, Self-Portrait with Easel 1926, as well as a large group of lesser known watercolours. Dix’s The War 1924 will also form a key element of the exhibition, a series of 50 etchings made as a reaction to and representation of the profound effect of his personal experiences of fighting in the First World War.
Sander’s photographs also observe a cross-section of society to present a collective portrait of a nation. Sander commenced his major photographic project People of the Twentieth Century in 1910, an ambitious task that occupied him until the 1950s. The project resulted in more than 600 images in which people were categorised into what he described as ‘types’, including artists, musicians, circus workers, farmers and, in the late 1930s, images of Nazi officers. More than 140 photographs from the ARTIST ROOMS collection will be displayed to create a large-scale timeline of Weimar Germany, placing individual subjects against a backdrop of the era’s tumultuous cultural and political history.
Text quoted from Tate gallery Liverpool: Portraying a Nation: Germany 1919-1933

Robert Doisneau :: Les petites filles du bateau / The Little Girls of the Boat, Ile de Ré, 1945 / src: Monsieur Cocosse
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