An article by research fellow Christian Drobe, ‘War Painting and the Soldier as the New Man: Karl Sterrer’s Pilot Portraits and the Ambivalent Face of Heroism during the First World War‘ has just been published in the RIHA Journal.
Tag: The New Man
Artwork of the Month, March 2020: The New Adam / The New Eve by Sándor Bortnyik (1924)
In the 1920s new concepts became prominent across Europe that mingled technology with the idea of the human. The Czech novelist Karel Čapek (upon the suggestion by his brother Josef) was the first to use the word ‘robot’ for artificial lifeforms modelled after humans, in his famous play R.U.R. (1920).[1] Čapek was in fact referring to an old system of forced labour in Central Europe, where the peasantry had to provide the local lords with a certain amount of unpaid labour every year, the so-called robota (work).[2] The pivotal moment of Čapek’s play is the robots’ uprising against their creators, which leads to the extinction of mankind. In the epilogue, however, the robots Primus and Helena develop human feelings for each other, and the former engineer Alquist, one of the last humans alive, declares them the new Adam and Eve.