Introducing Adventures in the Print Trade[1] by British writer Neil Philip, who currently has a post on Degenerate Art during Nazism, a fave subject of mine, illustrating the beneficial side effects of censorship best illustrated by Lichtenberg:
“The book which most deserved to be banned would be a catalogue of banned books.” —Georg Christoph Lichtenberg, Aphorisms (G 37 in R. J. Hollingdale‘s translation and numeration)
Neil, author of Adventures in the Print Trade, begins his post thus:
“In 1929, the artist Richard Lindner, whose work can be considered the bridge between Cubism, Surrealism, and Pop Art, was appointed art director of the Munich publishing house of Knorr and Hir. Lindner remembered, “I saw Hitler every day in Munich at the Café Heck, a small café with about ten tables and thirty seats… Hitler used to sit there every day at his usual table. Our table was beside his and we knew each other because we avoided direct contact… He always wanted to be with artists.”[2]
The Window, 1958 Original lithograph by Richard Lindner [3]
Child’s Head, 1939 Original lithograph by Paul Klee [4]
Le Jardin d’Amour, 1981 Original silkscreen by Herbert von Arend [5]
Aus de Walpurgisnacht, 1923 Original woodcut by Ernst Barlach [6]
Woodcut for 10 Origin, 1942 Original woodcut by Wassily Kandinsky [7]
Untitled, 1979 Original lithograph by Boris Herbert Kleint [8]
Maschinenwerkstätte, 1921 Original lithograph by Lili Réthi [9]
Fabulously original, my only and usual gripe is that, art blogs should use Flickr or a similar service.
Thanks for highlighting one of my favorite blogs. I always anticipate Neil’s illuminating comments on my own posts — he can articulate what I can only vaguely hint at.
You are most welcome, Will, I believe I discovered Neil via you. His last post was particularly original.