Friday, July 30, 2010

Painting : George Grosz's 'Eclipse Of The Sun'



Born in Berlin, George Grosz (1893-1959) was a leading member of the Dada Movement, who later painted many caustic works criticizing the rise of Nazism. Like many artists who fled Europe, Grosz immigrated to the United States and was teaching at the Art Students League in New York. Grosz returned to Germany in May 1959 to live out his days, but died from a fall down a flight of stairs within weeks of his return.

George Grosz’s large masterpiece Eclipse of the Sun of 1926 became available only in 1968, after it was acquired by the Heckscher Museum of Art. The painting is a scathing indictment of the military-industrial complex and of materialism, featuring an industrialist, a general, and four headless members of the bureaucratic bourgeoisie, all under a sun that is obscured by a dollar sign. The donkey atop the table and the dead skeleton strewn on the floor are the tell-tale signs of modern nation-states across the world. Eclipse of the Sun is one of the most important oil paintings of the 20th Century.


9 comments:

  1. Very disturbing painting.
    Keep posting such important paintings on your blog every now and then.
    Along with introductory write-ups.
    That would be very much enlightening.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Excellent painting. Particularly because it exactly depicts the situation we as part of a four member team are facing in our office. There is a general who has chopped off our heads and the sun is eclipsed by the Dollar. There is a donkey (health deteriorating day by day)on our table alongwith whom, satya, you also would have to walk through the rest of your life. I hope you would understand.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for the explanation. Iwas wondering what the head less guys were doing in the pic! They ARE like the smug bourgeoisie

    ReplyDelete
  4. Wonderful art posting!

    The explanation about this beautiful painting given by u make me to understand the meaning and worth of it.

    ReplyDelete
  5. One more interpretation can be added, the general and the industrialist are presented as larger than life characters, an indication on their hegemony into other areas.

    ReplyDelete
  6. its funny cuz the museum this painting is is only 3 small rooms not anything big.

    ReplyDelete
  7. My father, Thomas Constantine, now 82, acquired this painting in the late 40's at the age of 19, as payment of a $104 dept from a young man he worked with, who's Father received the painting as a gift from the artist himself. My father accepted the painting as payment, he found it an interesting political depiction of the world. At 19, my father, a Cypriot immigrant saw the meaning of the painting. I remember this painting, rolled up in our Garage, as a little girl. My father sold the painting to Heckscher in 1968 for 15,000. My father has a great explanation of this painting. This is what the artist thought of what was going on in the world at the time he painted it, very, very politically symbolic. The Donkey, the public, who walk with binders and are fed news/newspaper propaganda, Nazi Germany, killed in the name of the church, (the big guy with the wreath of Jesus and a candy coated cross) and other Governments sit around and do nothing (the guys with no heads, writing laws/deals and sit around twidleing thumbs) as the banks get bigger, the dollar sign in the sun, and is all the money made on war, as the people suffer and are imprisoned in their own lives. (the person behind bars on the floor with the scull) Notice the shoes, Rich People in Gov. The Guy who is whispering (with all the guns,tanks and arms under his arm) was thought to be the Man who really started the rise of Nazism that Led Hitler to who he was and what he did. (not sure of the guys name), also notice the rope at the end of what the donkey is standing on, that is something that is used to pull the rug out from under you ... yes, a very interesting painting, and very political.

    ReplyDelete
  8. I entered the above post, about my Father selling this painting to Heckscher .. here is a great explanation of the painting

    It is a scathing indictment of the corrupt
    military establishment of the Weimar Republic. A fat, weapon-carrying industrialist whispers in the ear of a decorated general wearing a laurel wreath, identified as Paul von Hindenburg (1847-1934), who was Field
    Marshal during World War I and second president of the Weimar RRepublic (1925-1934). Headless ministers ready to carry out their orders surround the two. In front of von Hindenburg is a funerary cross painted
    red, white, and black, the colors of the former German imperial flag. A bloody sword recalls the general’s deeds during the war. A donkey, the symbol of the German burgher, stands at the edge of the table, wearing
    blinkers emblazoned with the imperial eagle and gobbling up the lies printed in the press. Under the table, a child is seen behind the bars of a prison representing Germany’s future. The table, painted green and
    red, the colors of money and blood, tilts precipitously, threatening to throw
    von Hindenburg, the industrialist, and the ministers down the stairs and into the pit of death below. At the upper left, a dollar coin eclipses the sun,suggesting that capitalism and power, represented by the military-industrial complex, will lead to apocalypse. Above the figures, destruction is
    seen in the fires in the dark background. A World War I airplane is seen
    at the upper right. Eclipse of the Sun was exhibited at the Galerie Flechtheim in Berlin in 1927, but it did not sell and Grosz brought it with him when he came to the U.S. in 1933.

    Research by The Heckscher’s Chief Curator Kenneth Wayne has pieced together its subsequent history. In the late 1940s, the
    painting came into the possession of Thomas Constantine, a house painter who acquired it as reimbursement for $104 he had loaned a
    coworker friend in lower Manhattan. The friend’s father had acquired the painting directly from Grosz. Too large to hang, the painting was rolled up at Constantine’s Long Island home for many years. He eventually tried to sell the painting to several major New York museums, but didn’t find a buyer. In 1968, Heckscher Museum Director Eva Gatling saw the painting at the Harbor Gallery in Cold Spring Harbor. She pursued its acquisition
    with singular vision and commitment,soliciting contributions from the Museum membership. Today, this masterpiece of twentieth-century
    art is The Heckscher Museum’s most acclaimed painting and quite plausibly the most important artwork on all of Long Island.

    ReplyDelete
  9. This is a timeless painting. If I think of today's Europe or USA I still see exactly this picture.

    ReplyDelete