Otto Dix, Sylvia von Harden and the New Woman
The Portrait of the Journalist Sylvia von Harden made by Otto Dix in 1928 is the result of both the painter and the journalist meeting each other at the Romanisches Café. Dix saw in Von Harden a representation of an entire epoch, 1920s Berlin, a time when the Neue Frau (New Woman) came to be. 0:00 Berlin in the 20th Century 1:00 Neue Frau 1:17 Otto Dix and Sylvia von Harden 2:24 Portrait of Sylvia von Harden Support us on Patreon: / thecanvas

▶︎
Otto Dix – Controversial painter of the New Objectivity movement

▶︎
Everyone Ignores The Most Disturbing Detail Here

▶︎
Chaos and Classicism: The New Woman

▶︎
The Dark Reality of Otto Dix: Pain, Politics, and Powerful Paintings - Generalised Version

▶︎
Romaine Brooks: Shades of Gray

▶︎
Otto Dix - Der schonungslose Maler (deutscher Maler des Expressionismus und der Neuen Sachlichkeit)

▶︎
Sins of the Weimar Republic

▶︎
My Golden Retriever Heals a Terrified Rescue Kitten in Just 3 Meetings!

▶︎
The French Do Not Care About Work

▶︎
It Was Actually Caught On Camera... And It Changes Everything!

▶︎
The Hellish War Paintings of Otto Dix

▶︎
City Girls: Berlin’s Modern Women of the Weimar Republic

▶︎
Cannibalism in Tarsila do Amaral's Abaporu

▶︎
George Grosz: A collection of 94 works (HD)

▶︎
The Most Hated Painting in History

▶︎
Francis Bacon and The Brutality of Fact (1987)

▶︎
Three brushstrokes: Otto Dix

▶︎
The Dangerous Life of Tamara de Lempicka: Art Deco’s Most Scandalous Painter

▶︎
Viva | Artifacts

▶︎
