Article 74CZM Death, power and paranoia: painting that shocked German society finally returns to Berlin

Death, power and paranoia: painting that shocked German society finally returns to Berlin

by
Philip Oltermann European culture editor
from World news | The Guardian on (#74CZM)

Mors Imperator caused a scandal in 1887 amid fears it mocked the German kaiser - more than 100 years later it is being displayed in a state museum

Wrapped in a cloak with ermine fur and wearing a jagged iron crown, a hulking skeleton rests one foot on a globe and knocks over a royal throne with a dramatic flick of its ivory wrist.

Entitled Mors Imperator (Death is the Ruler"), the German artist Hermione von Preuschen's 1887 symbolical painting was meant to express the transience of fame and power. But authorities feared the picture could be seen as mocking the ageing German Emperor Wilhelm I, who then had recently turned 90, and refused to accept its submission to the Berlin Academy of the Arts' annual exhibition that year.

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