GOETZ: Opus 215 another new arrival
cacheman
Posts: 3,118 ✭✭✭
Another satirical I received recently. I am still trying to read up on the history for this particular time to help me understand the symbolism used by Goetz regarding “Uncle Sam” hobbeling, and Britain and France holding down who I assume is Germany.
THE CONDITIONS FOR ARMISTICE (Waffenstillstandsbedingungen) 1918, Cast AE, 58mm.
To commemorate the signing of the armistice effective 11 A.M., November 11, 1918. Inscription on obverse “Conditions of Armistice.” In exergue “Foch has the say-so now.” Inscription on reverse “A people of 70 million suffers, but does not die.”
THE CONDITIONS FOR ARMISTICE (Waffenstillstandsbedingungen) 1918, Cast AE, 58mm.
To commemorate the signing of the armistice effective 11 A.M., November 11, 1918. Inscription on obverse “Conditions of Armistice.” In exergue “Foch has the say-so now.” Inscription on reverse “A people of 70 million suffers, but does not die.”
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Shep
Hmmmm.... the seeds for WWII were cast early and bore fruit. The reverse with the raised, clenched fists seems to be a chilling harbinger of things to come.
is that you end up being governed by inferiors. – Plato
09/07/2006
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"Ask, and it shall be given you; seek, and ye shall find; knock, and it shall be opened unto you." -Luke 11:9
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"For the LORD is our judge, the LORD is our lawgiver, the LORD is our king; He will save us." -Isaiah 33:22
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While Britain and France hold him down. The symbolism is clear.
BTW, most historians now consider the two world wars as separate acts of the same drama.
We ARE watching you.
“The most striking example of a changed viewpoint is found in Goetz’s medals concerned with President Wilson and his Fourteen Points. Goetz hails Wilson, in Opus 226, with the title, “Welcome Saviour of Mankind,” but with his next piece, Opus 227, “Woodrow’s Mousetrap,” the artist’s attitude toward Wilson has changed. A giant mousetrap depicts how the Germans were trapped relying on Wilson’s Fourteen Points. The title, “System Bastard” (in German, System Schufterle) expresses Goetz’s feeling of betrayal.
The span between these two medals is only seven months but very significant months these were for the history of Germany and Europe. The myth of the “stab in the back” (Dolchstosslegende) was created by these incidents. Ludendorff, and other German generals of World War I, claimed that they had been lured into an armistice in November, 1918, by the promises of Woodrow Wilson and his Fourteen Points. While this myth had no proper foundation, it was nevertheless the opinion of Goetz and the German public that a betrayal had taken place.”
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