Headlines

Georg Baselitz, the German painter who turned postwar art upside down, dies at 88

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 30, 2026

5 min read

· Last updated: April 30, 2026

Add as preferred source on Google
Georg Baselitz, the German painter who turned postwar art upside down, dies at 88

German Painter Georg Baselitz, Pioneer of Upside Down Art, Dies at 88

Life and Legacy of Georg Baselitz

By Maria Martinez

April 30 (Reuters) - Georg Baselitz liked to insist — sometimes as a taunt, sometimes as a shield — that he did not know how to paint. That he had "no talent."

Rejected at 17 by the Dresden Academy of Fine Arts, he talked his way into an academy in East Berlin only to be expelled two semesters later for "sociopolitical immaturity."

"I was stupid," he recalled. "I was uneducated, but I was a rebel."

From that rebellion, Baselitz forged a career that made the child of Nazi Germany, schooled under Soviet communism, one of the defining artists of postwar Germany.

The painter and sculptor, known for his depictions of raw bodies and inverted landscapes, has died at the age of 88, according to the Thaddaeus Ropac art gallery, which worked with Baselitz for over 20 years.

The gallery published an obituary on its website, which said the artist had died peacefully. No cause of death was given.

A Rebel Shaped by Two Dictatorships

Georg Baselitz was born Hans-Georg Bruno Kern on January 23, 1938, in the Saxon village of Deutschbaselitz, a name he later adopted.

His father, a village schoolteacher and Nazi Party member, recorded Hans-Georg's birth in his diary. Inexplicably, he recorded the births of none of his other four children, the Sächsische Zeitung daily reported in 2018.

After the war, his father was barred from teaching. Baselitz's mother took over his duties at the school.

Baselitz spent his childhood amid the unforgiving discipline of Nazi Germany, and his adolescence amid the rubble and ideological re-education of the country's Soviet occupation zone.

"I was born into a destroyed order, a destroyed landscape, a destroyed people, a destroyed society," he later recalled. "And I didn't want to reestablish an order: I had seen enough of so-called order. I was forced to question everything, to be 'naive,' to start again."

After he was expelled from the East Berlin academy, he moved to West Berlin, where he finished his studies and absorbed modernism in a way that felt, he said, like a sudden intake of oxygen.

He recalled the shock of first seeing works by Jackson Pollock and other abstract expressionists — evidence, in his telling, that the United States had a serious culture despite what he had been taught.

But rather than imitate an American style, Baselitz turned back to German sources, drawing on expressionism, folk traditions and imagery often dismissed by critics as ugly or even "degenerate."

Early Influences and Education

Baselitz's formative years were marked by the contrast between Nazi discipline and Soviet re-education, shaping his rebellious approach to art and life.

Scandal as a Calling Card

At a 1963 solo show in Berlin, authorities seized two of his paintings — "The Big Night Down the Drain" and "The Naked Man" — on obscenity grounds. In both crudely made works, "erections emerge from abject bodies," as The Art Newspaper put it.

The episode made Baselitz famous.

The early pictures, marked by raw bodies, stunted masculinity and abrasive humour, were widely seen as provocation.

Supporters and museum curators have also framed them as a blunt report on postwar German life: damaged, compromised and struggling to find a new footing.

The "Heroes" Series

That sensibility carried into his mid-1960s "Heroes" paintings, which presented hulking, battered figures that looked less like victors than survivors stumbling out of a defeated national myth.

Inverting Art: The Upside Down Period

But Baselitz's most recognisable works came in 1969, when he began painting motifs upside down.

After earlier experiments that fractured or partially inverted figures, he produced fully inverted works including "The Wood on Its Head" and "The Man by the Tree".

He did not simply flip finished images, he composed and painted them inverted from the start.

That approach altered how viewers read his works. By disrupting recognition, it forced attention onto the mechanics of painting — its colour, balance and composition.

"An object painted upside down is suitable for painting because it is unsuitable as an object," Baselitz said.

International Recognition and Controversy

The inversions made Baselitz an international figure in the 1970s and 1980s, as the market and institutions that once treated him as scandalous increasingly positioned him as a pillar of European postwar art.

His public reputation, however, did not settle into quiet respectability.

He repeatedly sparked backlash with remarks about female painters, including a widely reported claim that women "don't paint very well".

He also confronted the limits Germany's history places on gesture and imagery: a wooden sculpture shown at the 1980 Venice Biennale was widely read as evoking a Nazi salute, a reading he denied.

Personal Life and Later Years

He was married to Johanna Elke Kretzschmar, known as Elke, with whom he had two sons.

In later life, Baselitz painted huge canvases from his wheelchair and moved his brushes and paints in a rolling cart.

"The sensible thing, in my situation, would naturally be to say: 'I stick to small formats'," he told Spanish newspaper El Pais at age 87. "But of course I don't do what's sensible. What's right for me is the nonsensical."

(Editing by Olivier Holmey)

Key Takeaways

  • Baselitz’s death at age 88 on April 30, 2026, was confirmed by Thaddaeus Ropac and widely reported across media sources (heni.com).
  • He gained fame in the 1960s with provocative works—like ‘The Big Night Down the Drain’—that were seized for obscenity, and in 1969 began his signature inversion technique to challenge perception and underscore the act of painting itself (straitstimes.com).
  • A major posthumous exhibition, “Eroi d’Oro,” featuring his final works, will open May 6 in Venice alongside the 2026 Biennale, further cementing his enduring influence (heni.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Georg Baselitz?
Georg Baselitz was a renowned German painter and sculptor famous for his inverted artworks and influence on postwar German art.
How old was Georg Baselitz when he died?
Georg Baselitz died at the age of 88.
What is Georg Baselitz known for in the art world?
He is known for his paintings of raw bodies, inverted landscapes, and groundbreaking approach to the mechanics of painting.
Where was Georg Baselitz born?
He was born in the Saxon village of Deutschbaselitz, Germany.
What made Georg Baselitz’s art style unique?
He became famous for painting his motifs upside down, which challenged viewers’ perceptions and emphasized the act of painting itself.

Tags

Related Articles

More from Headlines

Explore more articles in the Headlines category