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Cover: The Seven Deadly Sins - Otto Dix 1933
Otto Dix created The Seven Deadly Sins in 1933. It is an
allegorical work representing the political situation in Germany
at the time, and was created immediately after the Nazis had Dix
removed from his teaching position at the Dresden Art Academy. The figures are Avarice (an old,
bent over hag clutching at money), Envy (who rides the
back of Avarice), Sloth (the figure in the skeleton
costume who holds the scythe, and whose legs and arms form a
rough swastika), Lust (who dances in a lascivious way
behind Death, Anger (the horned Demon behind Death), Pride (the
enormous head behind the scythe, whose ears are plugged and who
has an anus for a mouth), and Gluttony (represented by
the figure in the uppermost right corner who wears a cooking pot
on his head). The figure of Envy, who rides the back of Avarice,
wears a mask of Adolf Hitler. As a matter of precaution, Dix did
not paint in the Hitler moustache until after the War! The
figure of Sloth is prominently featured because the Artist
blamed the German people's lack of alarm and concern as a
primary reason for the Nazis rise to power.
Mark Vallen
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