Herbert Smagon | |
Birth Date: | January 2, 1927 |
Birth Place: | Karviná, Czechoslovakia |
Death Date: | Unknown |
Death Place: | Germany |
Nationality: | German |
Herbert Smagon (pronounced as /de/) was a German soldier and painter.
Herbert Smagon was born on January 2, 1927, in the coal mining town of Karviná in Czechoslovakia.[1]
In 1937, due to the closure of German schools and an increasing atmosphere of anti-German sentiment, Smagon's family fled Czechoslovakia and settled in Berlin when he was 10 years old. Smagon's grandfather, a lithographer, introduced him to creative illustration at an early age, and he began taking art lessons at the age of 12.[2]
In 1941, the Smagon family moved to Vienna in German-occupied Austria.
In 1943, Smagon was called into Luftwaffe service as a luftwaffenhelfer and was assigned to an auxiliary anti-aircraft unit. In the same year, he began his study at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts, attending lectures by Prof. . Impressed by his artwork, Baldur von Schirach invited Smagon to an interview.[2]
In 1947, Smagon returned to Allied-occupied Germany as an ethnic German refugee.[2] After the war, he established himself in Stuttgart as an independent graphic designer. Between 1986 and 1997, works by Smagon were displayed in London and Turin.[2]
In 1995, Smagon produced Wiedervereinigung (Reunification), also known as Der Fall der Berliner Mauer, an allegorical depiction of the fall of the Berlin Wall.[3] [4]
Smagon's historical works included, among other things, images of Soviet troops raping and murdering children in Rössel, child soldiers at the Siege of Breslau, and German children burned alive on Wenceslas Square after the Prague uprising. Some of his works have generated controversy for depicting Allied war crimes during World War II. He described his historical artwork in the following way:
In the 2010s, the caricatured faces of the Soviet soldiers in Smagon's painting Besetzung der Stadt Rössel in Ostpreussen am 28/1/1945 became an anti-Russian internet meme.[5]