Although Grosz made his first oil paintings in 1912 while still a student, his earliest oils that can be identified date from 1916. By 1914, Grosz worked in a style influenced by
Expressionism and
Futurism, as well as by popular illustration,
graffiti, and children's drawings. Other examples include the apocalyptic
Explosion (1917),
Metropolis (1917), and
The Funeral, a 1918 painting depicting a mad funeral procession. He settled in Berlin in 1918 and was a founder of the Berlin
Dada movement, using his satirical drawings to attack bourgeois supporters of the
Weimar Republic. His drawings, usually in pen and ink which he sometimes developed further with watercolor, frequently included images of Berlin and the Weimar Republic in the 1920s. Corpulent businessmen, wounded soldiers, prostitutes, sex crimes and orgies were his great subjects (for example, see
Fit for Active Service). His draftsmanship was excellent although the works for which he is best known adopt a deliberately crude form of caricature in the style of
Jugend. and also includes a number of erotic artworks. After his emigration to the USA in 1933, Grosz "sharply rejected [his] previous work, and caricature in general." In place of his earlier corrosive vision of the city, he now painted conventional nudes and many
landscape watercolors. More acerbic works, such as
Cain, or Hitler in Hell (1944), were the exception. In his autobiography, he wrote: "A great deal that had become frozen within me in Germany melted here in America and I rediscovered my old yearning for painting. I carefully and deliberately destroyed a part of my past." Although a softening of his style had been apparent since the late 1920s, Grosz's work assumed a more sentimental tone in America, a change generally seen as a decline. His late work never achieved the critical success of his Berlin years. In 1968, the
Heckscher Museum of Art in Huntington purchased the painting
Eclipse of the Sun for $15,000.00, raising the money by public subscription. As it portrays the warmongering of arms manufacturers, this painting became a destination of protesters of the
Vietnam War in Heckscher Park (where the museum is sited) in the late 1960s and early '70s. In 2006, the Heckscher proposed selling
Eclipse of the Sun at its then-current appraisal of approximately $19,000,000.00 to pay for repairs and renovations to the building. There was such public outcry that the museum decided not to sell, and announced plans to create a dedicated space for display of the painting in the renovated museum. ==Legacy and estate==