Saturday, May 14, 2011

Woman with Dead Child


 “Woman with Dead Child” (1903) by Kathe Kollwitz depicts one of the saddest events in the human experience—a mother saying goodbye to her deceased child. The etching is one of the many examples of Kollwitz’s pieces that address unfortunate situations such as poverty and early loss. Interestingly enough, Kollwitz used her own living son as the model for the young boy. Coincidently, Kollwitz would experience the actual loss of her son fifteen years later in World War I (NYU Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database).

Kollwitz’s goodbye is one of the most difficult in life. In the natural stages of life, the children are supposed to bury their parents: not the other way around. In this case, the mother has to say goodbye to her deceased child. The mother is grasping her son’s limp corpse with every muscle in her body. Unlike the child’s angelic face, her countenance is somewhat distorted and is portrayed in a dark light (NYU Literature, Arts, and Medicine Database). The heartbreak and pain this mother is experiencing is inconceivable to most people, yet Kollwitz manages to evoke empathy in the viewer by the expressive nature of her etching. Indeed, the scene is so realistic that the viewer feels as if they are saying goodbye as well. 

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