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Kollwitz, Käthe |
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Kollwitz, Käthe (1867–1945)German graphic artist and sculptor. One of the leading expressionists, she is noted for her harrowing and often disturbing drawings, etchings, lithographs, and woodcuts on the themes of social injustice, poverty, and human suffering, as in the woodcut cycle Never Again War! (1924). Her woodcut The Mothers (1923) demonstrates her ability to communicate sorrow and political protest through art. She is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century. Kollwitz was born in Königsberg, East Prussia (now Kaliningrad, in Russia). Her father, Karl Schmidt, was an ardent radical, and her husband, Dr Karl Kollwitz, worked among the poor of Berlin, both men influencing her views and her subject matter. Among her principal works are March of the Weavers (1897; University of Michigan Museum of Art), the Peasants' War series (1902–08), the poster Bread, Children Starving (1924), and the lithographs Death (1934–35), and Seeds for Sowing Must Not Be Milled (1942). Her sculptures include a war memorial at Dixmude (1932), made in part to commemorate her son, who was killed in World War I.
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