Details
JOSEPH BEUYS (1921-1986)
Democracy is Merry
screenprint in colors with handwritten text, on cardstock, 1973, signed in blue ink, numbered 77/80, published by Edition Staeck, Heidelberg, Germany, the full sheet, in generally good condition
Sheet: 2912 x 45 in. (749 x 1143 mm.)
Literature
Schellmann 68
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Lot Essay

Beuys' tenure as a professor at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf was marked by great controversy. Already well–known internationally when he took his post in 1963, Beuys believed art to be a crucial catalyst for political activism, and he encouraged his students to participate in political activities with him. Beuys entered into a battle with the school over its policy of limited admission, which he felt was undemocratic, and he intentionally over–enrolled his classes in protest. Mounting complaints against his many artistic provocations from other members of the faculty eventually led to his dismissal, in 1972, when he was finally escorted out of the building after staging a sit-in with his students. Onto this screenprinted photograph of the event, Beuys inscribed in ink the phrase, "Demokratie ist lustig" (Democracy is merry), using the institutions suppression of political dissent as the subject matter of a new artwork.

- The Museum of Modern Art (online)

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