b
Kattowitz, Germany [now Katowice, Poland], 13 March 1902; d
Paris, 24 Feb 1975v
German photographer, sculptor, printmaker, painter and writer. As a
child he developed fear and hatred for his tyrannical father, who
totally dominated his gentle and affectionate mother. He and his
younger brother Fritz found refuge from this oppressive family
atmosphere in a secret garden decorated with toys and souvenirs and
visited by young girls who joined in sexual games. In 1923 Bellmer
was sent by his father to study engineering at the Technische
Hochschule in Berlin, but he became interested in politics, reading
the works of Marx and Lenin and joining in discussions with artists
of the Dada Movement. He was especially close to George Grosz, who
taught him drawing and perspective in 1924 and whose advice to be a
savage critic of society led him to abandon his engineering studies
in that year. Having shown artistic talent at an early age, he began
designing advertisements as a commercial artist and illustrated
various Dada novels, such as Das Eisenbahnglück oder der
Antifreud (1925) by Mynona, in a style influenced by Grosz.
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