Otto Griebel (1895-1972) was born in Meerane, Saxony, the son of a wallpaper hanger.  He began studying interior design and painting at age seventeen at a  local school, and then pursued his studies in Dresden until he was  drafted in 1915. In 1918, after being seriously wounded, Griebel joined  the revolutionary Soldiers' Council. 
 Otto Griebel, The International, 1928
After the war his life became  centered around political and artistic activity: in 1919 he joined the  German Communist Party (KPD), became a member of the Novembergruppe,  participated in Dresden Dada activities, and made contacts with the  Berlin Dada group. In 1921 he assisted the KPD during the various  workers' uprisings and worked as a draftsman for many of the party's  publications. This same year he made the acquaintance of George Grosz,  Otto Nagel, and Rudolf Schlichter.
 Otto Griebel, Sunday Afternoon, 1920
Griebel continued to work for political organizations, such as the Junge  Rheinland (Young Rhineland), the Dresdner Sezession-Gruppe 19,  Boleslav Strzelewicz's Red Troupe, the Rote Gruppe and the Internationale  Arbeiterhilfe, throughout the 1920s. Despite his anti-establishment  stance, however, he actively exhibited his artwork in public German  institutions. In 1929 he participated in the Neue Sachlichkeit exhibition  in Amsterdam; this same year he ran into difficulties with the Gemini  government and was tried for insulting the military. The trial seems to  have had little impact on either his artistic or political growth, for  in 1930 he participated in a political puppet show and exhibited his  work in both Berlin and Dresden.
 Otto Griebel, Ship Boilerman, 1920
During the Nazi years, Griebel was subjected to increasing  persecution. In 1933 he was arrested by the Gestapo, but was released  after protest by the Secession. Nevertheless, he was permitted to work  as an exhibition planner at the Dresden Hygiene Museum. Only in 1937 was  his work (together with that of many other artists) removed from German  institutions; several pieces were displayed in the "Degenerate Art"  exhibition in Munich. 
 Otto Griebel, The Naked Whore, 1923
Despite his liberal political views, Griebel managed to live out the  war years almost entirely unscathed in Germany and German-occupied  territory. In 1939, he was drafted into military service in Poland, and  after obtaining a release from active duty, he served as an exhibition  coordinator in Cracow. His political consciousness did not wane, and in  1943 he successfully helped twenty Jewish men escape from the Tarnow  ghetto. When, the following year, he was drafted again into the militia,  he deserted. During 1944, most of Griebel's work was destroyed in the  allied bombing of Dresden. Subsequently, in 1946, he returned to  teaching at the College of Fine Arts in Dresden. Throughout the 1950s  and 60s Griebel worked at several art institutions in Dresden and  exhibited his art all over the continent.




Did you ever think to post this info on Griebel's wikipedia page? It is severely lacking, but your info is fantastic!!
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