World War I and the Visual Arts, Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2017
Organized to commemorate the anniversary of World War I, this exhibition focuses on
the impact of the war on the visual arts. Moving chronologically from its outbreak to the
decade after the armistice, World War I and the Visual Art s highlights the diverse ways
artists represented the horrors of modern warfare. The works on view reflect a variety of responses, ranging from nationalist enthusiasm to a more somber reflection on the carnage and mass devastation that resulted.
The exhibition, drawn mainly from the collection of the Met and supplemented with select loans, includes prints, drawings, photographs, illustrated books, posters, periodicals, World War I trading cards from the Museum's celebrated Burdick Collection, and other documentary material. this exhibition reveals how artists- including Otto Dix, C.R.W. Nevinson, George Grosz, Kathe Kollwitz, Fernand Leger, Gino Severini, and Edward Steichen-reflected a myriad of styles, approaches, ideologies, and mediums in response to the war and how it influenced modern art.

