Grosz married Eva Peters on 22 May 1920. This painting reflects his
Dada artistic tendency of the time, and is an ironic take on his recent marriage. His wife had been nicknamed by him as Maud, and the title Daum is an obvious anagram of that short form. The scene takes place having an irrealistic urban background that seems inspired by the work of
Giorgio de Chirico. His wife is largely undressed, still wearing her hat, appearing reluctant near her husband, Grosz, who appears in a half-human, half-machine form, as a robot or automaton. This is a reference to the
dadaist concept of the artist as a kind of machine. The title also mentions ironically fellow
Dada artist
John Heartfield. The concept of the painting was explained by Grosz publisher Werner Herzfeld who said that marriage "comes between the bride and groom like a shadow, this fact that, at the very moment when the wife is allowed to make known her secret desire and reveal her body, her husband turns to other soberly pedantic arithmetical problems..." ==References==