This exhibition sheds light on the reasons that made Kathe Kollwitz a controversial artist during her lifetime. Kollwitz's figures, often drawn from her immediate surroundings of the city streets of Berlin, are shown in contorted and exaggerated postures, emphasizing a fragile, suffering version of the individual that borders on the grotesque. This exhibit considers Kollwitz and a number of other artists in that context, from her German contemporaries, George Grosz and Otto Dix, to later twentieth-century artists like Eduardo Kac, Tom Arndt, and Andy Warhol.
Added by Upcoming Robot on June 8, 2012