Dr. Mayer-Hermann. Berlin 1926.
Otto Dix. (German, 1891-1969). Dr. Mayer-Hermann. Berlin 1926. Oil and tempera on wood, 58 3/4 x 39" (149.2 x 99.1 cm). Gift of Philip Johnson. © 2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
On view at MoMA
Dr. Mayer–Hermann was a renowned throat specialist whose waiting room was filled with the most prominent singers and actresses of his day. Dix was among his patients. While Dix is best known for his unflinching, audacious depictions of prostitutes, crippled war veterans, and other traumatized subjects, here he depicts a member of the professional class with wit and satire. The abundance of circular shapes that fill the canvas parody the doctors round body and facefrom the curves of the doctors chubby hands and the round bags under his eyes, to the reflector on his headband and the mirror above his head.
Publication excerpt
The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA Highlights, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, revised 2004, originally published 1999, p. 130
When Dix painted this picture of Wilhelm Mayer-Hermann, a prominent Berlin doctor, he was a favorite portraitist of Germany's cultural bohemia and its patrons. Yet his eye could be coolly unflattering. Dix had fought in World War I, a crucial formative experience: "It is necessary to see people in this unchained condition in order to know something about man," he said, and he came out of the war wanting "to depict things as they really are." Having experimented earlier with Expressionist and other modern styles, in 1920 he abandoned them for an approach and technique modeled on fifteenth- and sixteenth-century German art. In the process he was identified with what became known as the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) movement, which advocated an unsentimental realism in the treatment of modern life.
Dix may portray the doctor exactingly, but the pose and the setting seem chosen to stress his rotundity. Everything is round: the face, the bags under the eyes, the double chin, the shoulders, the position of the arms, the tummy. A round lamp is affixed to the doctor's forehead, and the circular x-ray machine behind him reflects the room as rounded. Also behind him are a round clock-face and a round electrical socket. However precise the depiction, it verges on satire.
Dr. Mayer-Hermann. Berlin 1926.
Otto Dix. (German, 1891-1969). Dr. Mayer-Hermann. Berlin 1926. Oil and tempera on wood, 58 3/4 x 39" (149.2 x 99.1 cm). Gift of Philip Johnson. © 2008 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn
On view at MoMA
Dr. Mayer–Hermann was a renowned throat specialist whose waiting room was filled with the most prominent singers and actresses of his day. Dix was among his patients. While Dix is best known for his unflinching, audacious depictions of prostitutes, crippled war veterans, and other traumatized subjects, here he depicts a member of the professional class with wit and satire. The abundance of circular shapes that fill the canvas parody the doctors round body and facefrom the curves of the doctors chubby hands and the round bags under his eyes, to the reflector on his headband and the mirror above his head.
Publication excerpt
The Museum of Modern Art, MoMA Highlights, New York: The Museum of Modern Art, revised 2004, originally published 1999, p. 130
When Dix painted this picture of Wilhelm Mayer-Hermann, a prominent Berlin doctor, he was a favorite portraitist of Germany's cultural bohemia and its patrons. Yet his eye could be coolly unflattering. Dix had fought in World War I, a crucial formative experience: "It is necessary to see people in this unchained condition in order to know something about man," he said, and he came out of the war wanting "to depict things as they really are." Having experimented earlier with Expressionist and other modern styles, in 1920 he abandoned them for an approach and technique modeled on fifteenth- and sixteenth-century German art. In the process he was identified with what became known as the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) movement, which advocated an unsentimental realism in the treatment of modern life.
Dix may portray the doctor exactingly, but the pose and the setting seem chosen to stress his rotundity. Everything is round: the face, the bags under the eyes, the double chin, the shoulders, the position of the arms, the tummy. A round lamp is affixed to the doctor's forehead, and the circular x-ray machine behind him reflects the room as rounded. Also behind him are a round clock-face and a round electrical socket. However precise the depiction, it verges on satire.