German artist Käthe Kollwitz d 4/22/1945. Few artists were ever so committed to depicting the private struggles and suffering of the poor: hunger, unemployment, sickness, domestic violence, the oppressive burden of despair. And the hope of a better world.
Conversation
A pacifist and socialist—these words were not mere ideological labels. They represented a moral and spiritual affirmation of the preciousness of human life and a spirit of resistance to all the idols of death. Banned by the Nazis, she survived until days before the armistice.
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“Culture arises only when the individual fulfills his cycle of obligations. If everyone recognizes and fulfills his cycle of obligations, genuineness emerges. The culture of a whole nation can in the final analysis be built upon nothing else.”—Käthe Kollwitz
