European Art

I was with my art major gf talking to my brother on FaceTime who I was about to play some civ v with. I'm Germany because I'm secretly a national socialist. We're loading up the game and my brother is talking to my gf about this new Van Gough biography he is reading. I guess Van Gough had a pretty shitty art life, and he was only famous after he died so he never got to see real success. Since I'm always hiding my power level I ask my gf "did the nazis ever make any art? Or were they just burning everything?" That's when my gf unknowingly made me love Hitler even more. She goes, "actually, Hitler was trying to SAVE the art! He only threatened to destroy it when he was losing." My gf is by no means red pilled. She's a cut above the average woman or else she wouldn't be my gf, but for instance she says she regrets/feels bad for voting for trump. I like talking to her about history because her art perspective gives me neat perspectives into things. She was the last person i expected to learn something cool about Hitler from for sure.

>ITT post the art Hitler tried to save
>ITT discuss lesser known good things Hitler did
>ITT we discuss Hitler's good side

This is too long and gay to read. Kill yourself

>playing as germany in civ v
you're a retard. also, you sound 16. kill yourself.

Literally a paragraph. Sorry it's not upside down though, like everyone else in the world I forgot you existed.

I played an older version when I was 16, but I only got Civ V because it's a way for my brother and I to bond or whatever. Don't be mad you don't have family that cares about you. Also thanks for not talking about small stuff Hitler did

Hitler was absolutely right about degenerate art. A culture is partly defined by the art it makes. People like Rembrandt were some of the greatest products of their times and their work is legendary. Today all we have are glass box buildings and women bleeding on canvases :(

>Discuss Hitler's good side
>side
user, he's a two headed coin.
>Implying bad side

almost third trip/dub in a row streak broken

Who painted this and when?

>off by one

Honestly I thought it was a meme at first, but Hitler really was a good guy. At the very beginning issue/point, I refuse to believe 95% of people would vote for someone because they're stupid or whatever. The Germans were average people like me. I hope trump succeeds where Hitler failed

Hams Thoma. I guess Hitler really liked his stuff? I was hoping more anons would give input in this thread so I could learn about the art Hitler encouraged/liked.

took less than a minute

wtf fuck is wrong with you

also checked

Thanks based comrade. I'll look into it, I'm at work so I can provide nothing worth... keep the good fight for an elightened society.

I'm not a comrade =_=

Rembrandt has to be my favorite artist, but in a general sense European art is the best. Having seen some great works in person I can attest that some statues and paintings make you feel real feels when you look at them. I hope that great art makes a come back.

Diverging a little bit but I think in music Progressive rock kind of stuff will make a comeback. It'll be a part of a larger rejection of the current status quo (indie, simple, it's cool because it sucks, easy to make) and a genuine urge to create objectively difficult, master skillmanahip art, music included.

Anyone know any architecture stuff Hitler liked?

good thread bump

What's something you once came across that made you think "i agree with Hitler?" Basically contribute some knowledge user.

I think Hitler was a little too control freaky about the Hitler youth thing but at the end of the day he created some damn fine young men and women

Progressive is still on, look at Anathema, the retro electric will be the trend for a decade at least, before music evolves again into something weird but with great potential (after countless shit on the same innovations has been made to spread across media), just like art, everyhing comes and goes, but with so many humans, things like realistic style by true talents will leave behind and erase the old masterworks... a comrade is a bud, so don't be so self conscious... we just have to be glad that humanity has now a global archive to store the greatest things we've accomplished.

When I talk progressive making a comeback I'm saying gen z going to see the next Genesis doing drum duets and shit. The core of it is intense theory- stuff you have to use discipline to study. You're right about the throwback electronic though. If Kek wills it fashwave will make a breakthrough.

I myself am learning the clawhammer banjo as a way to connect to an American tradition (and get babes). No (((Mumford and sons))) stuff, I'm learning confederate folk songs to keep the sounds of those Americans alive. I think tradition should be a core value of my life at least and of civilization.

I think spirituality and a connection to something greater is also making a comeback. Trump invoking God at the inauguration is an example of this, The Life of Pablo is another. Hopefully this spirituality combines with new art and leads us to some works Hitler himself would patronize.

1889, "Der Wilde Jagd," by Franz Von Stuck.

Do you know why Hitler liked this? Did he like just this piece or did he like the artist? I think I'll save this for a wallpaper

To be honest I just hope the Elite for globalism under selected families and their forced opposition stops this PC everywhere and delusional propaganda that divides the basics of a stable and truly progressive society. That will make art aesthetic again in itself. Or at least, that all humans who haven't trescended primal animalism and like living like parasites are thrown out and kept away by walls or electric fences (back to politics).

In English, the title is "The Wild Hunt," or "The Wild Chase." The painting is by one of his most favorite artists, Franz Von Stuck, and Adolf Hitler admired the painting especially because it depicts the old Germanic god Wotan/Odin leading the dead on a hunt, or some such action. Apparently, Hitler was so inspired by Odin's appearance in this painting, he made it his own in a sense, going for a similar hairstyle and mustache. The facial features are even very similar.

It was painted in the year he was born, 1889.

Correction: "Die Wilde Jagd," not "Der Wilde Jagd," apparently. I am not well-versed in the German language, but there is the aspect of die and der changing for different words.

That is probably the most striking part about that painting, besides the appearance, although we must remember that it was Hitler who could have based himself upon the painting, and not the other way around. It seems strangely "prophetic," yet it just happens to be a very Hitler-looking portrayal of the Odin/Wotan figure, and it left a lasting impression on a certain art-minded individual in the 1900s or 1910s.

This is great. Can we get more of this guy's work in this thread?