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John Heartfield

 
Art Encyclopedia: John Heartfield

(b Berlin, 19 June 1891; d Berlin, 26 April 1968). German photomontagist, draughtsman, typographer and stage designer. After a difficult childhood owing to the persecution of his father for his political beliefs, he studied art at the K?nigliche Kunstgewerbeschule in Munich from 1907 to 1911, specializing in poster design. In 1912 he took his first job in a printing works in Mannheim, moving to Berlin in 1913, where he and his brother Wieland Herzfelde made contact with avant-garde circles. Heartfield's experiences in World War I led him to conclude that the only worthy art was that which took account of social realities. He destroyed all his early work.

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Photography Encyclopedia: John Heartfield
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Heartfield, John (John Helmut Herzfelde; 1891-1968), German graphic artist and writer, who trained at the Munich (1907-11) and Berlin (1912-14) design schools. During the First World War he avoided military service by feigning a nervous illness and in 1916, in protest against anti-British propaganda, changed his name to Heartfield. In 1916-17 he co-founded the Malik Verlag and the journal Neue Jugend, and joined the Dada movement. Between 1919 and 1935 he published satirical journals with his brother Wieland and the artist Georg Grosz. He had joined the German Communist Party in 1918 and from 1922 worked increasingly for its publications, including the Arbeiter illustrierte Zeitung. Between 1930 and 1938 he created over 200 photomontages, including famous anti-republican and anti-Nazi propaganda pieces like The Sleeping Reichstag (1929) and The Meaning of the Hitler Salute (1932). He also worked for the stage directors Erwin Piscator and Max Reinhardt. He emigrated in 1933 to Prague, then in 1938 to London. In 1950 he returned to East Berlin, where he designed political posters and worked for Brecht's Berlin Ensemble and the German Theatre.

— Jens Jaeger

Bibliography

  • Heartfield, J., Krieg im Frieden: Fotomontagen zur Zeit 1930-1938 (1982).
  • Willett, J., Heartfield versus Hitler (1999)
Wikipedia: John Heartfield
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Postal stamp portraying Heartfield

John Heartfield (19 June 1891, Berlin – 26 April 1968, East Berlin) is the anglicized name of the German photomontage artist Helmut Herzfeld. He chose to call himself Heartfield in 1916, to criticize the rabid nationalism and anti-British sentiment prevalent in Germany during World War I.

Contents

Career

In 1918 Heartfield began at the Berlin Dada scene, and the Communist Party of Germany. He was dismissed from the Reichswehr film service on account of his support for the strike that followed the assassination of Karl Liebknecht and Rosa Luxemburg. With George Grosz, he founded Die Pleite, a satirical magazine. After meeting Bertolt Brecht, who was to have an influence on his art, Heartfield developed photomontage into a form of political and artistic representation. He worked for two communist publications: the daily Die Rote Fahne and the weekly Arbeiter-Illustrierte-Zeitung (AIZ), the latter of which published the works for which Heartfield is best remembered.[1]

In 1933, after the National Socialists came to power in Germany, Heartfield relocated to Czechoslovakia, where he continued his photomontage work for the AIZ (which was published in exile); in 1938, fearing a German takeover of his host country, he left for England, living in Hampstead. He settled in East Germany and Berlin after World War II, in 1954, and worked closely with theater directors such as Benno Besson and Wolfgang Langhoff at Berliner Ensemble and Deutsches Theater.

In 1967 he visited Britain and began preparing a retrospective exhibition of his work, "photomontages", which was subsequently completed by his widow Gertrude and the Deutsche Akademie der Künste, and shown at the ICA in London in 1969.

In 2005, Tate Britain held an exhibition of his photomontage pieces.

Works

Grave of John Heartfield in Berlin

His photomontages satirising Adolf Hitler and the Nazis often subverted Nazi symbols such as the swastika in order to undermine their propaganda message.

One of his more famous pieces, made in 1935 entitled Hurrah, die Butter ist Alle! (English: Hurray, the butter is gone!) was published on the frontpage of the AIZ in 1935. A parody of the aesthetics of propaganda, the photomontage shows a family at a kitchen table, where a nearby portrait of Hitler hangs and the wallpaper is emblazoned with swastikas. The family — mother, father, old woman, young man, baby, and dog — are attempting to eat pieces of metal, such as chains, bicycle handlebars, and rifles. Below, the title is written in large letters, in addition to a quote by Hermann Göring during food shortage. Translated, the quote reads: "Iron has always made a nation strong, butter and lard have only made the people fat".

Homages in modern culture

Hurrah, die Butter ist Alle! served as the inspiration behind the song "Metal Postcard (Mittageisen)" by Siouxsie & the Banshees; the song was re-recorded in German and released as a single with Heartfield's work as the cover art.

The Swiss darkwave band Mittageisen (1981-1986) called themselves after John Heartfield's photomontage Hurrah, die Butter ist Alle!.

The band Blurt recorded a song called "Hurrah! Die Butter Ist Alle" on their 1986 album "Poppycock".

The Heartfield piece The Hand has 5 Fingers[2] with its original text: "5 fingers make a hand! With these 5 grab the enemy!", was referenced by alternative metal band System of a Down. A text printed on the back of the album System of a Down reads: "The hand has five fingers, capable and powerful, with the ability to destroy as well as create". It should be noted however that this concept is not confined to Heartfield's work and is present, for example, in the symbolism of the raised fist.

The British crust punk band Discharge used Heartfield's work "Peace and Fascism" for the cover artwork of their compilation "Never Again".

Laibach, a Slovenian avant-garde act, often admits being influenced by Heartfield's art. They have recorded the song Herzfelde, apparently named after him.

References

  • Brigstocke, H. (2001). The Oxford companion to Western art. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198662033
  • Willett, John (1997). Heartfield versus Hitler. Hazan (Fernand) Editions, France. ISBN 285025536X
Foototes
  1. ^ Brigstocke, 2001, p. 334
  2. ^ fit.edu John Heartfield - The Hand has 5 Fingers image

External links


 
 
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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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