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Not a Pretty Picture: 'GLITTER & DOOM' AT NEW YORK'S MET.


Anita Berber is the star of the Metropolitan Museum of Art's exhibition, "Glitter and Doom Glitter and Doom is the name of a Special Exhibit formerly shown at the Metropolitan Museum of Art featuring portrait art of Germany from 1919-1933, between the World Wars when the Weimar Republic was in political power. : German Portraits from the 1920s." She certainly wasn't beautiful. Like most of the paintings in the show, which closes February 19, her portrait is a caricature, designed to exaggerate her haggard boniness and pasty skin. The portrait is all white and red--bloodless, stage-makeup white for Berber's skin, and drenching drenching

farmer's term for the administration of medicines as solutions or suspensions in water by mouth with a drench bottle, gun or funnel.


drenching bit
to be included in a bridle as a bit.
, garish red for her lips and dress. Her contorted face looks like something out of Nosferatu, or like the terrifying ter·ri·fy  
tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies
1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten.

2. To menace or threaten; intimidate.
 vision from Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "The Rime rime: see rhyme.  of the Ancient Mariner": "Her skin was as white as leprosy leprosy or Hansen's disease (hăn`sənz), chronic, mildly infectious malady capable of producing, when untreated, various deformities and disfigurements. ; / The Night-mare Life-in-Death was she."

But then, nightmare was her shtick shtick also schtick or shtik  
n. Slang
1. A characteristic attribute, talent, or trait that is helpful in securing recognition or attention:
. Berber was a dancer; with her husband, she created and performed in shows with titles such as Suicide, Morphine, and Cocaine. Her career was based on the same impulse that animated most of the Met exhibit's painters: the need to demonize de·mon·ize  
tr.v. de·mon·ized, de·mon·iz·ing, de·mon·iz·es
1. To turn into or as if into a demon.

2. To possess by or as if by a demon.

3.
 and glamorize glam·or·ize also glam·our·ize  
tr.v. glam·or·ized, glam·or·iz·ing, glam·or·iz·es
1. To make glamorous: tried to glamorize the bathroom with expensive fixtures.

2.
 the same vices, the same decadence. And so this lurid portrait of a woman intentionally making herself repulsive can stand as the exemplary painting of the show: painful, cruel, and undeniably compelling.

The exhibit's paintings are swollen with anger, contempt, and self-disgust. It's one thing to lampoon one's enemies, but one of the striking features of the Met show is how often the Weimar artists attacked their own, savagely caricaturing friends and patrons as mincing homosexuals or hook-nosed Shylocks. Even the self-portraits often suggest shame and revulsion.

There are a few signs of gentleness and beauty--for example, Otto Dix's lovely sketch of his wife looking up at him from her pillow: a shy, dreamy sketch, all tenderness and sleepy flowing lines. It couldn't be a sharper contrast to the other portrayals of sex in the exhibit--the vulture-faced transvestites and pornographically splayed nudes. (The show bears a warning to parents that some of its images are unsuitable for children.) One wall is dominated by Dix's painting of the eccentric aristocrat and poet Iwar von Lucken, looking shabby and lost in a tiny attic room, while outside his window a swirling apocalyptic sky is pierced by a church-spire angel. Although Dix exaggerated von Lucken's long nose and wistful expression, the portrait isn't cruel; the El Greco sky suggests impending im·pend  
intr.v. im·pend·ed, im·pend·ing, im·pends
1. To be about to occur: Her retirement is impending.

2.
 tragedy, but for once the painter really seems to respect his subject.

Rudolf Schlichter was another artist who clearly believed that his subjects were people. He was one of the rare defenders of "the workers" who actually seem to view the workers as individuals, rather than faceless masses or players in his own psychodrama psychodrama /psy·cho·dra·ma/ (-drah´mah) a form of group psychotherapy in which patients dramatize emotional problems and life situations in order to achieve insight and to alter faulty behavior patterns. . The Met features a naturalistic portrait of a tired prostitute with a resigned expression. Unlike the show's other portraits of prostitutes, this one doesn't rely on the lurid nature of its subject's profession for its effect. In fact, Schlichter downplayed any hint of sexuality, portraying his subject in a long skirt and modest blouse. With her cigarette and exhausted expression, she looks like an overworked bureaucrat on a smoke break. Schlichter was able to make even a painting of a stranger suggest overlooked intelligence and kindness.

In both style and tone, this portrait is the exception. Although the artists were all part of a group dubbed "Verists" for their concern with real-world situations and social problems, few of the paintings are naturalistic. The show draws out the connection between the heightened-contrast, dreamlike Expressionist style of filmmaking--born in Germany during roughly the same period--and caricature. Many of the paintings seem caught somewhere between an Expressionist film and a political cartoon. Expressionism lent itself readily to horror films, and the Met exhibit soon begins to seem like a nightmare carnival filled with frightening stock characters like the profiteer and the sadist.

It is impossible--as the show's title acknowledges--to view the paintings without looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 the shadow of Nazism. Many of the artists (and their subjects) fled to America. But their Weimar-era paintings show surprisingly few hints of what was to come. Those caricatured Jews and gay men seem especially vicious given the context. But overall, the painters showed far more political attention to their recent past than to their future. Many of the paintings deal with the legacy of World War I: angry depictions of disfigured dis·fig·ure  
tr.v. dis·fig·ured, dis·fig·ur·ing, dis·fig·ures
To mar or spoil the appearance or shape of; deform.



[Middle English disfiguren, from Old French desfigurer
 veterans, or Otto Dix's How I Looked as a Soldier, a self-portrait sketch showing the artist in his younger days as a grim-faced soldier clutching a huge gun. (The caption of Dix's Widow notes that the subject might also have been a prostitute: after the Great War, the terms "widow" and "prostitute" were sometimes used interchangeably.)

If there is any hint of what lay ahead, it is perhaps the air of hopelessness that hangs over the paintings. Everything was corrupted, and so everything was rejected. There are almost no paintings showing a love of anything, not even beauty or art itself. The subject of Heinrich Maria Davringhausen's The Profiteer seems trapped, sitting in a blank office surrounded by huge, menacing skyscrapers, his face anxiously outthrust out·thrust  
intr. & tr.v. out·thrust·ed, out·thrust·ing, out·thrusts
To extend or cause to extend outward.

n.
Something, such as an outcropping of rocks, that extends outward.

Noun 1.
.

Portraits, by their nature, have a tendency to trap their subjects. Unlike a photograph, which takes less time to create and almost always suggests life continuing outside the edges of the frame, a painted portrait can suggest that the subject held the same position, looked the same, was the same, for hours--and maybe forever. A painted portrait, far more than a photograph, typically suggests, "This is the way things are and the way they will always be." The Weimar portraits in "Glitter and Doom" seem to trap the viewer as well. They are, almost without exception, brilliant: skillfully done, compelling, with a car-crash quality that makes them impossible to ignore. They are also hopeless.

One of the portraits shows the psychiatrist Heinrich Stadelmann looking like an asylum escapee escapee A popular term for older relatives of those at risk for Huntington's disease, who didn't develop the disease. See Huntington's disease. . The caption notes that Stadelmann had also been a Dadaist, who, as his friend George Grosz grosz  
n. pl. gro·szy
See Table at currency.



[Polish, from Czech gro
 put it, "considered Dada a kind of mental disease of society worth studying." The disease whose symptoms are displayed in the Met show has a simpler name: nihilism nihilism (nī`əlĭzəm), theory of revolution popular among Russian extremists until the fall of the czarist government (1917); the theory was given its name by Ivan Turgenev in his novel Fathers and Sons (1861). .

Eve Tushnet is a freelance journalist in Washington, D.C.
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Title Annotation:Glitter and Doom: German Portraits from the 1920s, Metropolitan Museum of Art
Author:Tushnet, Eve
Publication:Commonweal
Geographic Code:1U2NY
Date:Feb 9, 2007
Words:1008
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