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American Imago

Volume 58, Number 1, Spring 2001

E-ISSN: 1085-7931 Print ISSN: 0065-860X

DOI: 10.1353/aim.2001.0001

Bettina Brand-Claussen
Malcolm Green
The Witch's Head Landscape:
American Imago - Volume 58, Number 1, Spring 2001, pp. 407-443

The Johns Hopkins University Press

Bettina Brand-Claussen and Malcolm Green - The Witch's Head Landscape: A Pictorial Illusion from the Prinzhorn Collection - American Imago 58:1 American Imago 58.1 (2001) 407-443 The Witch's Head Landscape: A Pictorial Illusion from the Prinzhorn Collection* Bettina Brand-Claussen [Figures] In his book Artistry of the Mentally Ill of 1922, Hans Prinzhorn presented the Swabian electrotechnician August Natterer (1868-1933) as one of ten "masters" to whom he devoted brief monographs. He gave him the pseudonym Neter, described his life and reproduced his oeuvre, or rather a very specific selection of his works. His choice concentrated on paintings that in his view portrayed "schizophrenic experiences quite nakedly" (Prinzhorn 1972,171). Consequently, Prinzhorn only included those works that illustrated his ideas of non-intentional, authentically schizophrenic painting. The result was that he allowed the representational side of Natterer's oeuvre that lacked a certain mystery to go by the board, for he viewed it as "soberly realistic" and "amateur" (1972, 163). He only reproduced poetically loaded works that were replete with the desired mystery, such as Natterer's Antichrist (ill. 1) or Miraculous Shepherd which shortly after were to be discovered by the Surrealists. Prinzhorn failed to include a reproduction of Natterer's Witch's Head-Landscape (ill. 2) presumably because he considered it too grotesque and banal. Many puzzled later over the drawing and...


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