This Brief Biography of the German Dada Pioneer, Groundbreaking Graphic Designer, and Anti-Fascist Collage Artist, John Heartfield, was written by his paternal grandson, John Joseph Heartfield. It has been slightly modified from the bio John J Heartfield wrote for The Encyclopedia of German-American Relations. Gratitude is owed to several John Heartfield Scholars for additional information.
For John J Heartfield’s personal recollections of his grandfather, please visit: John Heartfield’s Personal Life.
The Chronology Section offers a year-by-year account of John Heartfield’s life and times.



Above is a photo from The John J Heartfield Collection of the artist John Heartfield in 1912. The twenty-one-year-old fledgling art student had not yet changed his name from “Helmut Herzfeld” to “John Heartfield.” On the back of the photo he clearly writes his birth name “Helmut.”

German Dada & Political Artist John Heartfield Biography

John Heartfield [Top. Credit: John J Heartfield Collection] is credited as the founder of modern photomontage, a form of collage.
His anti-fascist art became famous on both sides of the Atlantic as “art as a weapon.” Heartfield used the fascists’ own words and images against them. From 1930-1938, he created an astounding 240 anti-fascist photomontages for covers of the AIZ magazine (circulation around 300,000 to 500,000 at its height). These AIZ covers appeared on street corners all over Adolf Hitler’s Berlin. The “Photomontages of the Nazi Period” comprise a unified artistic critique of the rise of fascism that has never been duplicated.Heartfield lived in Berlin until Easter Sunday, April 1933, when he narrowly escaped assassination by the SS. He fled across the Sudeten Mountains to Czechoslovakia where he rose to number-five on the Gestapo’s most wanted list.Below is an excerpt From David King’s book, John Heartfield, The Devastating Power Of Laughter. It describes the 1933 Easter Sunday Evening when Hitler’s jackboots came for John Heartfield.“Berlin, April 14, 1933: They came for him in the night. The paramilitary SS burst into the apartment block and headed straight for the raised ground floor studio where John Heartfield was in the middle of packing up his artwork, knowing that his only chance left of survival was a life in exile; he was on their most wanted list. Hearing them dislocating his heavy wooden door, he dived through his french windows and leapt over the balcony into the darkness. He landed badly and sprained his ankle. The Nazis made a flashlight sweep search of the darkened courtyard below yet failed to focus on an old metal bin in the far corner on which were displayed some enamel signs, the sort that advertise motor oil, or soap, or an aperitif. Under its battered lid, one of Hitler’s greatest enemies, far from having vanished into the ether, crouched in torment, squashed in a box full of the local residents’ garbage. For the next seven hours he hid there, toughing it out as he heard the nightmare sounds of the barbarians ransacking his studio and destroying his work. When the raid was over, Heartfield quietly and unobtrusively opened the lid, climbed out of the bin, exited the courtyard and began his nerve-racking flight to Prague. Germany was now enemy territory, there was a high price on his head and he had nothing.”
After his narrow escape from the SS, Heartfield walked around the Sudeten Mountains to Czechoslovakia.
[Below: John Heartfield In Mountain Gear. Credit: John J Heartfield Collection.]

artists persecuted by The Nazis


This artist who openly attacked Adolf Hitler and The Nazi Party while living in Berlin was five-foot-two inches tall, with red hair and blue eyes. His “weapon” was his imagination, scissors, glue pots, dabs of paint, and stacks of photographs and magazine articles. He insisted his montages contained both literal and ethical truth.
From his early work as fledging painter to his embrace of Dada to the anti-fascist montages that made him a Nazi target, Heartfield’s life and work was a profile in courage.
Adolf Der Übermensch and Goering: Der Henker are two examples of photomontages Heartfield produced and had widely distributed while he remained under constant threat of assassination by Hitler’s Third Reich.


Below is John Heartfield’s famous montage of Hitler turning his financial support into political lies appeared on Berlin newsstands in 1932.
Adolf Der Übermensch: Schluckt Gold und redet Blech (Adolf The Superman: Swallows Gold and spouts Junk) AIZ Cover, Berlin, Germany, 1932
WW2 anti-facist art Adolf Der Übermensch


Forced to flee Nazi Germany a step ahead of the SS, Heartfield attacked the Nazi Party from Prague. In 1934, Heartfield created the famous AIZ cover that exposed Hermann Goering as The Third Reich’s executioner and the Reichstag fire as the work of the Nazi Party.
Göring: Der Henker des Dritten Reichs (Goering: The Executioner of the Third Reich) AIZ Magazine Cover, Prague, Czechoslovakia, 1933
WW2 anti-facist art Göring Goering The Executioner


ART AS A WEAPON ->Periodicals->AIZ has more of John Heartfield’s anti-fascist collages with historical perspective.
Bertolt Brecht wrote, “John Heartfield is one of the most important European artists.”
He was born “Helmut Franz Josef Herzfeld” on June 19, 1891 in Berlin-Schmargendorf. The photo above of a young Helmut Herzfeld with a moustache was taken in 1912. Under the photo at the top of this page is a scan of what Herzfeld wrote on its back [Credit: John J Heartfield Collection].
It was in 1916, while he was living in Berlin, that Herzfeld became appalled at the shouts of “God Punish England!” that were so common in the streets of the city. As a symbolic political protest against this anti-British fervor sweeping Germany, he informally changed his name from Helmut Herzfeld to John Heartfield to become, as David King describes him, “the greatest political artist and graphic designer of the twentieth century.”
It was not until April 29, 1968, that his name was legally changed to John Heartfield.
In 1912, after studying arts and crafts in Munich and Berlin, he found work as a commercial artist. From the beginning, Heartfield was infused with a passionate belief that the purpose of art was not to glorify the artist, but to serve the common good.
In 1916, Heartfield destroyed all his paintings [mainly landscapes] except one entitled, “The Cottage In The Woods.” Although the young artist was considered talented, he believed his artwork to be unworthy and irrelevant. Yet, soon he was to become the central figure in the German Dada art movement. German Dada has had a profound effect upon culture, advertising, politics, and society. Early one morning in 1916, Heartfield and George Grosz experimented with pasting pictures together. From this exercise grew Heartfield’s lifetime obsession with “photomontage.”
Sometime during his seventh or eighth year of childhood, Heartfield’s parents abandoned him, his brother, and their three sisters in the woods. The children were eventually separated and raised in a series of foster homes. Throughout his life, Heartfield maintained a close relationship with his brother, Wieland. In 1913, Wieland Herzfeld also changed his name, less dramatically to “Wieland Herzfelde.”
In 1917, John Heartfield founded the Malik-Verlag publishing house in Berlin. At that time, his beloved brother, Wieland, was serving near the front. The brothers were soon to become partners in Malik-Verlag, with John being responsible for the majority of the graphics.
Heartfield invented the concept of three-dimensional wrap-around book dust jackets. The book dust jackets told a story from the front cover to the back. There’s speculation that Malik-Verlag sold more publications because of Heartfield’s covers than the actual content of the books.
In 1917, Heartfield became a member of Berlin Club Dada.
In 1920, he helped organize the Erste Internationale Dada-Messe [First International Dada Fair] in Berlin. Dadaists were the young lions of the German art scene, opinionated provocateurs who often disrupted public art gatherings and ridiculed the participants. They labeled traditional art trivial and bourgeois. Heartfield was a vital member of a circle of German titans that included Hannah Höch, George Grosz, Kurt Schwitters, Richard Huelsenbeck, Raoul Hausmann, and others.
In January of 1918, Heartfield joined the newly founded German Communist Party (KPD). The KPD, eventually blamed by the Nazis for the burning of the Reichstag, was the only serious political threat to the rise of Adolf Hitler and The Third Reich. From many of his montages, it is clear that Heartfield blamed the greed of capitalists, especially those that manufactured steel and munitions, for the horrors he had witnessed firsthand during World War I.
It is essential to note that the vast majority of his work demonstrates that Heartfield was a devoted pacifist. [CURATOR’S NOTE: My own conversations with my grandfather made it clear to me that he never believed in violent revolution]. He had faith in both people and the truth. He was certain if he brought the two together, the result promised a better life for the vast majority of society.
The work of Weimar Republic artists, writers, composers, and playwrights had a profound effect upon Heartfield. He, in turn, deeply influenced their work. His theater sets were vital elements in the early works of Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator.
Heartfield played a major role in helping Brecht to realize the concept of the “alienation effect” [Verfremdungs-effekt]. This new theater technique was to remind spectators that they were experiencing an enactment of reality and not reality itself. Using minimal props and stark stages such as those created by Heartfield, Brecht interrupted his plays at key junctures to encourage the audience to be part of the action and not to lose themselves in it.
Heartfield preferred reality to artistic pretension. While he referred to himself as a “monteur,” he preferred the title “engineer.” A George Grosz painting entitled, “The Engineer Heartfield” hangs in MOMA, The Museum of Modern Art in New York.Although he did not wish to be labeled an artist, Heartfield had a full measure of an artist’s passion. His Dada contemporaries tied him to a chair and enraged him just to experience the unbridled intensity of his emotions.
heartfield Club Dada Photomonteur
During the 1920s, Heartfield had produced a great number of photomontages for Malik-Verlag Publishing. He created dust jackets for books by Upton Sinclair, Kurt Tucholsky, and many other progressive writers.
Heartfield’s artistic genius was to reach its zenith with his art that expressed his hatred of fascists, in particular Adolf Hitler and The Third Reich. From 1930 to 1938, Heartfield designed 240 pieces of anti-Nazi art for the AIZ [Arbeiter Illustrierte Zeitung], a magazine published by the New German Press, which was run by the political activist Willi Münzenberg. The AIZ had a significant readership in Weimar-era Germany. It may easily have had the second highest circulation in Germany in the early nineteen thirties. After the National Socialists took control, the AIZ was published for German readers in Czechoslovakia, Austria, Switzerland, and Eastern France.
When one thinks of artistic courage, it should be remembered that Heartfield was a resident of Berlin until 1933. His vehemently anti-fascist collages appeared on the covers of the AIZ on newsstands throughout the city. This is a vital point. From 1930-1933, Heartfield’s scathing anti-Nazi montages were clearly visible on Berlin Streets. Supporters also pasted posters of his montages on walls and surfaces for any passersby to see.
Although he shined in several other mediums, such as stage sets and book covers, there’s no doubt that Heartfield is best known for the satiric political montages he created during the 1930s to expose the insanity of Adolf Hitler, Herman Göring, and the entire Nazi philosophy. To battle the Third Reich with art, Heartfield created some of his most famous montages.
Above, In Adolf The Superman: Swallows Gold and spouts Junk Heartfield used a montaged X-ray to expose gold coins in the führer’s esophagus leading to a pile in his stomach as he rants against the fatherland’s enemies.
In the photomontage Göring: The Executioner of the Third Reich, Hitler’s designated successor is depicted as a bloody butcher.
One of Heartfield’s most famous montages, The Meaning of Geneva, Where Capital Lives, There Can Be No Peace!, shows a dove of peace impaled on a blood-soaked bayonet in front of the League of Nations, where the cross of the Swiss flag has morphed into a swastika. John Heartfield’s love of all animals and nature is well documented. This image can be considered an especially deep emotional expression.
Der Sinn von Genf The Meaning of Geneva AIZ Cover, Berlin, Germany, 1932
heartfield anti-war collage dove on bayonet

You can learn more about this montage and many others, along with historical perspective, in the ART AS A WEAPON ->Periodicals->AIZ section of the exhibition.
Heartfield’s artistic output was prolific and widely display. It was through rotogravure—an engraving process whereby pictures, designs, and words are engraved into the printing plate or printing cylinder—that he was able to reach this audience he coveted.
CURATOR’S NOTE: I’m certain my grandfather would be pleased and fascinated to see his work reproduced throughout the Internet and on this Digital Exhibition.
Forced to flee from Berlin, he continued to use the National Socialists’ own words to expose the truth behind their twisted dreams. In 1934, he montaged four bloody axes tied together to form a swastika to mock The Old Slogan in the “New” Reich: Blood and Iron (AIZ, Prague, March 8, 1934).
In 1938, he had to again run for his life—this time to England—before the imminent Nazi occupation of Czechoslovakia. He was interned several times in England as an enemy alien, then released as his health began to seriously deteriorate. His brother, Wieland, was refused an English residency permit in 1939 and, with his family, left for the United States. John wished to accompany his brother, but was refused entry.
In 1941, Heartfield made it clear that he wished to remain in England and did not wish to return to Germany [see John Heartfield Letter, 1941]. He and his third wife, Gertrud, found themselves with limited options.
Humboldt University in East Berlin offered Heartfield the position of “Professorship of Satirical Graphics” in 1947.
His response was, “Do I have to be a professor?”
Eventually, his brother Wieland convinced Heartfield to join him in East Berlin. He wanted his brother to take the apartment next to him. Wieland convinced Heartfield that he’d been well treated because Wieland had a comfortable position in a university.
In 1950, John Heartfield joined his brother East Berlin. The artist who had held such strong beliefs in communist philosophy in his youth was greeted with nothing but suspicion because of the length of his stay in England. He was interrogated by the Stasi and nearly tried for treason against the state. For six years, Heartfield was denied admission to the East German Akademie der Künste. He was unable to work as an artist and denied health benefits.
After six years of official neglect by the East German Akademie der Künste [Academy of Arts], Bertolt Brecht and Stefan Heym intervened on Heartfield’s behalf. He was admitted to the GDR AdK in 1956. However, his health had deteriorated and, although he subsequently produced some memorable montages addressing the threat of nuclear war, he was never as prolific again.
John Heartfield died on April 26, 1968 in East Berlin, German Democratic Republic.
Almost all of John Heartfield’s surviving original art is held within the comprehensive Heartfield Archiv in the Akademie der Künste in Berlin, Germany. The David King Collection can be see any day in the Heartfield Gallery, Tate Modern London. Admission is free.
From April 15 to July 6, 1993, the second floor of the Museum of Modern Art in New York City was the American venue for a critically acclaimed exhibit of Heartfield’s original montages.