Otto
Dix
(b Untermhaus, nr Gera, 2 Dec 1891; d Singen, 25 July
1969).
German painter, printmaker and watercolourist. His initial training
(1905–14) in Gera and Dresden was as a painter of wall decorations, but he
taught himself the techniques of easel painting from 1909 and began
concentrating on portraits and landscapes in a veristic style derived from
northern Renaissance prototypes. After seeing exhibitions of paintings by
Vincent van Gogh (Dresden, 1912) and by the Futurists (1913), he quickly
fused these influences into a randomly coloured Expressionism.
Volunteering as a machine-gunner during World War I, he served in the
German army (1914–18), making innumerable sketches of war scenes, using
alternately a realistic and a Cubo-Futurist style. The experience of war,
moreover, became a dominant motif of his work until the 1930s. He later
commented: ‘War is something so animal-like: hunger, lice, slime, these
crazy sounds ... War was something horrible, but nonetheless something
powerful ... Under no circumstances could I miss it! It is necessary to
see people in this unchained condition in order to know something about
man’.