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Bookmark (persistent url): https://dac-collection.wesleyan.edu/objects-1/info/6671
“What shameful misery to be obliged to play the hare in this world–but his lordship is in need of hares!”
192220th century
693 x 505 mm (27.3 x 19.9 in.)
George Grosz, German, (1893–1959)
- satire - Artistic device holding up human folly and vice to scorn, derision, or ridicule. [November 1994 scope note added; related term added; alternate term added. May 1994 related term added.]
- social satire
- war - From TGM: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/collection/tgm/item/tgm011468
- World War I
- world wars - Wars that involve most of the leading political and military powers of the world or most of the earth's territory. [July 1993 descriptor added.]
- sheet Dimensions: 693 x 505 mm (27.3 x 19.9 in.)
No open access image available
George Grosz, German, (1893–1959) . “What shameful misery to be obliged to play the hare in this world–but his lordship is in need of hares!”, 1922. From Die Räuber. Photolithograph (photoreproduction of drawing) on handmade wove paper. sheet : 693 x 505 mm (27.3 x 19.9 in.). DAC accession number 1961.9.2.3. Purchase funds, 1961.
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