Otto Dix Prints: How I Looked as a Soldier : Fine Art Print

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The Prints of Otto Dix (1891-1969) How I looked as a Soldier, 1924 Fine Art Reproduction Reproduction Size: 12 x 9 inches This reproduction is a new, individually printed and proofed , superior quality, giclee* process, fine art print. It is printed on 100% cotton rag acid-free, heavyweight fine art paper with a luxurious textured watercolor paper finish and archival pigment inks to ensure permanence. Created for collectors, it IS NOT A POSTER or mass produced print on low quality, inexpensive paper . Germany suffered over 2.4 million war dead with another 2 million wounded survivors including 80,000 amputees and thousands who were horribly disfigured and mutilated. Modern armaments – exploding artillery shells and shrapnel inflicted wounds on human flesh and bone never seen before on such a scale in warfare. For the first time in history military hospitals near the front were able to save countless lives of but the lasting effects of some wounds were beyond medical science to restore. Horrible facial disfigurement was a common sight in military hospitals on both sides. The sciences of plastic surgery and facial reconstruction were still in their infancy. Germany’s 80,000 amputees had to rely on archaic artificial limbs in an age before plastics and lightweight alloys were invented. Otto Dix (1891-1969) was a German expressionist read more