John Heartfield
John Heartfield (born Helmut Herzfeld; 19 June 1891 – 26 April 1968) was an artist and a pioneer in the use of art as a political weapon. Some of his photomontages were anti-Nazi and anti-fascist statements. Heartfield also created book jackets for authors such as Upton Sinclair, as well as stage sets for such noted playwrights as Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator.
Life and career
Early life
John Heartfield (Helmut Herzfeld) was born on 19 June 1891 in Berlin-Schmargendorf. His father was Franz Herzfeld, a socialist writer, and his mother was Alice (née Stolzenburg), a textile worker and political activist.
In 1899, Helmut, his brother Wieland Herzfelde and his two sisters Lotte and Hertha, were abandoned in the woods by their parents.[1] For a while, the four children resided with an uncle in the small town of Aigens.
Heartfield, his brother, and George Grosz, launched the publishing house Malik-Verlag in 1917.
In 1908, he studied art in Munich at the Royal Bavarian Arts and Crafts School. Two commercial designers, Albert Weisgerber and Ludwig Hohlwein, were early influences.
First World War
On the back of a photograph which was taken in 1912,[2] his name is written as "Helmut." While living in Berlin, in 1917, he anglicised his name from "Helmut Herzfeld" to "John Heartfield," an English name to protest against the anti-British fervour sweeping Germany.[3] In 1916, crowds in the street were shouting, "Gott strafe England!" ("May God punish England!").
In 1920, John Heartfield and George Grosz experimented with pasting pictures together, a form of art later named "photomontage."
In January, 1918, Heartfield joined the newly founded German Communist Party (KPD).[3]
In 1917, Heartfield became a member of Berlin Club Dada.[3] Heartfield later became active in the Dada movement, helping to organise the Erste Internationale Dada-Messe (First International Dada Fair) in Berlin in 1920. Dadaists were the young lions of the German art scene, provocateurs who disrupted public art gatherings and ridiculed the participants. They labeled traditional art trivial and bourgeois. Heartfield was a member of a circle of German titans that included Erwin Piscator, Bertolt Brecht, Hannah Höch, and a host of others.
Heartfield built theatre sets for Erwin Piscator and Bertolt Brecht. Using Heartfield's minimal props and stark stages, Brecht interrupted his plays at key junctures to have the audience to be part of the action and not to lose themselves in it.
1919-39
In 1919, Heartfield was dismissed from the Reichswehr film service because 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.
Heartfield met Bertolt Brecht in 1924.
Though he was a prolific producer of stage sets and book jackets, Heartfield's main form of expression was photomontage. Heartfield produced the first political photomontages.[4] He mainly worked for two 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.
In the Museum of Modern Art in New York hangs a George Grosz Montage entitled, "The Engineer Heartfield."
During the 1920s, Heartfield produced a great number of photomontages, many of which were reproduced as dust jackets for books such as his montage for Upton Sinclair's The Millennium.
Heartfield lived in Berlin until April 1933, when the National Socialists took power. On Good Friday, the SS broke into his apartment, and the 5'2" Heartfield escaped by jumping from his balcony and hiding in a trash bin. He left Germany by walking over the Sudeten Mountains to Czechoslovakia.[5][6]
In Czechoslovakia, John Heartfield rose to number-five on the Gestapo's most-wanted list.
In 1934 he montaged four bloody axes tied together to form a swastika to mock the "Blood and Iron" motto of the Reich (AIZ, Prague, March 8, 1934).[7]
In 1938, he was forced once again to flee from the Nazis, this time to England, given the imminent German occupation of Czechoslovakia. He was interned for a time in England as an enemy alien, and his health began to deteriorate. Afterwards, he lived in Hampstead, London. His brother Wieland was refused a British residency permit in 1939 and, with his family, left for the United States.
Postwar period
Following the war, Heartfield settled in East Berlin, East Germany and worked closely with theatre directors such as Benno Besson and Wolfgang Langhoff at Berliner Ensemble and Deutsches Theater.
He was greeted with suspicion by the Stasi (East German Secret Police) because of the length of his stay in England. He was denied admission into the East German Akademie der Künste (Academy of the Arts). He was unable to work as an artist and was denied health benefits. He was suspected of "collaboration" by the Stasi because of the amount of time he had lived in England, and because his dentist was also under suspicion.
Due to the intervention of Bertolt Brecht and Stefan Heym, Heartfield was formally admitted to the Academy of the Arts in 1956. Although he subsequently produced some montages warning of the threat of nuclear war, he was never again as prolific as in his youth.
In 1967, he visited Britain and began preparing a retrospective exhibition of his work, "photomontages", which was subsequently completed by his widow Gertrud and the Academy of Arts, Berlin, and shown at the ICA in London in 1969.
John Heartfield died on April 26, 1968 in East Berlin, German Democratic Republic. He was buried close to Brecht's former home.
In 2005, the Tate Gallery, Britain held an exhibition of his photomontage pieces.
After his third wife Gertrud Heartfield's death, the East German Academy of the Arts took possession of all of Heartfield's surviving works. When the West German Academy of the Arts absorbed the East German Academy, the Heartfield Archive was transferred with it.
From April 15 to July 6, 1993, the second floor of the Museum of Modern Art, MOMA, in New York City was the American venue for an exhibition of Heartfield's original montages. The show was reviewed in The New York Times.[8]
Works
He is best known for political montages [9] which he had created during the 1930s to expose German Nazism. Some of his famous montages were created during the 1930s and 1940s.
- Adolf, the Superman (published in the Arbeiter-Illustrierte-Zeitung [AIZ, Workers' Illustrated Newspaper], Berlin, July 17, 1932),[10] used a montaged X-ray to expose gold coins in the Fuehrer's oesophagus leading to a pile in his stomach as he rants against the fatherland's enemies.
- In Göring: The Executioner of the Third Reich (AIZ, Prague, September 14, 1933), Hermann Göring is depicted as a butcher.[11]
- The Meaning of Geneva, Where Capital Lives, There Can Be No Peace (AIZ, Berlin, November 27, 1932),[12] shows the dove of peace impaled on a blood-soaked bayonet in front of the League of Nations, where the cross of the Swiss flag has morphed into a swastika.
- Hurrah, die Butter ist Alle! (English: Hurray, the Butter is All Gone!) was published on the front page of the AIZ in 1935. A parody of the aesthetics of propaganda, the photomontage shows a German family at a dinner table eating a bicycle, where a nearby portrait of Hitler hangs and the wallpaper is emblazoned with swastikas. The baby gnaws on an executioner's axe, also emblazoned with a swastika, and the dog licks a huge nut and bolt. Below, the title is written in large letters, in addition to a quote by Hermann Göring during food shortage. Translated, the quote reads: "Hooray, the butter is all gone!" Göring said in one Hamburg address: "Iron ore has made the Reich strong. Butter and dripping have, at most, made the people fat".[13]
Heartfield's artistic output was prolific. His works appeared as covers for the Arbeiter Illustrierte Zeitung (AIZ, Workers' Illustrated Newspaper) from 1929 to 1933, a popular weekly whose circulation rivalled any magazine in Germany during the early nineteen thirties. During 1931 Heartfield's photomontages were featured monthly on the AIZ cover, an important point, because most copies of the AIZ were sold at newsstands.
It was through rotogravure, an engraving process whereby pictures, designs, and words are engraved into the printing plate or printing cylinder—that Heartfield's montages, in the form of posters, were distributed in the streets of Berlin in 1932 and 1933.
His photomontages satirising Adolf Hitler and the Nazis often subverted Nazi symbols such as the swastika in order to undermine their propaganda message.
Homages in modern culture
Hurray, the Butter is All Gone!,[14] served as the inspiration behind the song "Metal Postcard" by Siouxsie and the Banshees. This song was re-recorded in German as "Mittageisen" and released as a single in September 1979 in Germany with Heartfield's work as the cover art. A few months later the single was also released in the UK. The Swiss darkwave band Mittageisen (1981–1986) named themselves after this song's title.
Slovenian and former Yugoslav avant-garde music group Laibach has a number of references to Heartfield's works: the original band's logo, the 'black cross', is really referencing Heartfield's art Der alte Wahlspruch im "neuen" Reich: Blut und Eisen (1934), a cross made of four axes, as can be seen on the inner sleeves and labels of their (vinyl) album Opus Dei (Mute, 1987, London). The cover art of their first self-titled album Laibach (Ropot, 1985, Ljubljana), is an evident reference to Heartfield's work Wie im Mittelalter… so im Dritten Reich (1934). In addition to that, there is a track called Raus! (Herzfelde), originally on Slovenska Akropola (Ropot, 1986, Ljubljana), but also included in Krst pod Triglavom and in the Opus Dei cd as Herzfeld (Heartfield).
The band Blurt recorded a song called "Hurray, the Butter is All Gone!" on their 1986 album "Poppycock".
The British hardcore punk band Discharge used Heartfield's work "Peace and Fascism" for the cover artwork of their compilation "Never Again".
Armenian American band System of a Down used Heartfield's poster for the Communist Party of Germany (The Hand Has Five Fingers) as cover art for their self-titled debut album.
Notes
- ↑ Biographical Chronology from "John Heartfield", Edited by Peter Pachnicke and Klaus Honnef, Harry N. Abrams Inc., New York, 1991
- ↑ "John Heartfield Biography by Grandson, John J Heartfield". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- 1 2 3 John Heartfield and the Agitated Image: Photography, Persuasion, and the Rise of Avant-Garde Photomontage, Andres Mario Zervigon
- ↑ "Heartfield in Context" by Maud Lavin, February, 1985
- ↑
- ↑ The Official John Heartfield Exhibition & Archive
- ↑ "John Heartfield Art Poster Blood and Iron". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- ↑ Kimmelman, Michael (16 Apr 1993). "Review/Art; Hated the Nazis, Loved the Soviets, Created Images to Mock and Admire". New York Times.
- ↑ "John Heartfield Art - John Heartfield Exhibition". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- ↑ "John Heartfield Posters - Political and Dada Art". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- ↑ "John Heartfield Art Poster Hermann Goering for AIZ Magazine". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- ↑ "Heartfield poster Never Again or Niemals Wieder". John Heartfield Exhibition. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
- ↑ ...], [contributors Rachel Barnes (2001). The 20th-Century art book. (Reprinted. ed.). London: Phaidon Press. ISBN 0714835420.
- ↑ Official John Heartfield Internet Archive | German Dada Artist | Hurray, the Butter is All Gone!, 1935
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Heartfield. |
- Brigstocke, H. (2001). The Oxford companion to Western art. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866203-3
- "John Heartfield: AIZ/VI 1930-1938." New York: Kent Gallery (1992). ISBN 1-878607-28-6
- Willett, John (1997). Heartfield versus Hitler. Hazan (Fernand) Editions, France. ISBN 2-85025-536-X
External links
- Grandson of John Heartfield John Heartfield, Dada Photomonteur: Official Internet Archive
- Towson University Heartfield's Online Art
- John Heartfield in Artfacts.Net
- Fostinum: John Heartfield - Numerous pieces by John Heartfield
Further reading
- Zervigón, Andrés Mario (2012). John Heartfield and the Agitated Image: Photography, Persuasion, and the Rise of Avant-Garde Photomontage. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-98177-2.