Artwork Title: Portrait Of The Painter Franz Radziwill

Portrait Of The Painter Franz Radziwill, 1928

Otto Dix

During the 1920s, Dix did several self-portraits in which he is cast in the finest light, a worthy successor to the legacy of the finest German artists. Radziwill, on the other hand, did not receive such treatment. The German artist was one of several colleagues Dix painted during this period. He is a slack-jawed Low German compared to the heroic, almost Christ-like, Dix. Dix was depicted well groomed and smartly dressed; his mannerisms were more manly then the man himself. In contrast, Radziwill is chubby and his features are rounded. Dix extracted all the testosterone from his body. His clothes are ill-fitting and his posture is poor. In Dix's hands he is a sorry figure. One year after this painted was completed, Radziwill ended a five year hiatus from self-portraiture. Coincidence? Probably not. It was though he sought to correct the record. See Self Portrait with Red Vest (http://curiator.com/art/franz-radziwill/self-portrait-with-red-vest) (http://www.ottodix.org/catalog-paintings/page/4/)
Uploaded on Dec 18, 2016 by Suzan Hamer

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