Elisabeth Voigt’s work is firmly rooted in classical Germanic symbology in this depiction of an elderly man, bowed slightly with age, dozing, wearing a sorrowful expression and sitting beneath a decrepit structure, is watched a young child play among wheat stalks. A stony path leads to where the two figures sit; their feet, unshod, touch the earth.
Voigt’s work addressed the hardships and simple joys of daily life, often through a religious lens. Stylistically her work echoes the rich heritage of German woodcut artists ranging from Albrecht Durer to the German Expressionists, during whose time Voigt was a student of both Kathe Kollwitz and Carl Hofer.
This work emblemizes her exploration of the human condition, which, with two World Wars and a Depression, was often at the forefront of Europe’s collective psyche during the first half of Voigt’s lifetime.