andreas paul weber (1893 - 1980)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/2292/0gUZLQBsJq5z03LRPMLy71gG8RdJ3GpJq-_QA4kbX6a0E_p1XjOxQ3-3OgUO7Itg_1643237757-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/3109/xapuUsYMyHhxRNaGHbGNjJiVOmOCz4QWGfein3h3_dANNVIZd_QUyyrNE0QYi0nD_1680641527-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/4726/no7GDerGUPaNOKq95hZLUkIu1gXGxwsTxcgXucUDGaL4FbWHQQ0-dzOOXq_Oa-DP_1738771301-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/3560/UvZvRLQUCh6qREcR0KnKKtRWEM1y8sf8oe5hfceNFR2DZKRSLAFo6zwSrJ77QFDw_1696061485-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/2969/J_gxNyn1Yj1E-4V3CK0cKfgy2DQWEz76ly6MfrCp9oZ0Pv3spYSQUVRG5cLgjKNm_1674510424-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/2969/J_gxNyn1Yj1E-4V3CK0cKfgy2DQWEz76ly6MfrCp9oZ0Pv3spYSQUVRG5cLgjKNm_1674510424-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/2867/O_I_lbnfP3zbbqDmX2i-WYltHZq1vtepBmyvOdf31Uc_6r03FW82LF9DiY0UcC55_1668846423-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/3314/3RPncNgtxWpm3j99pmEjWqXiqau0zRFrDSqXqyNrEHxGtljRlPL-1YqtCFIDUudq_1687610458-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/3353/_MqEmpvQtg4LP3yqvOtXUQCxF0UmJXleWu5CODvjwfAEP09Gt_heHs0N91UkMVxT_1692565545-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/1134/nfzpRCQk9HIjVZA8NRvy5e0zFlKAw-raWU8sZuXssQ30YkP7HzlEMPqI2hWF4-bs_1599060338-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/uploads/art_data/Artist/9775/VIL_Weber_A-Paul.webp)
Andreas Paul Weber was a German cartoonist, engraver, and lithographer.
Weber raised the themes of medicine and the environment, but was mainly a political cartoonist, but his relationship with the Fascist regime was very complicated and ambiguous.
For example, in 1937 Weber was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to a concentration camp, but in 1940 he received the state prize for the best politically engaged artists. In the same year, he illustrated the book Soldatengeist (Soldatgeist), with a preface by Himmler himself, which sold a hundred thousand copies. In 1944, in the magazine Action. Die Aktion. Kampfblatt für das neue Europa) published a series of his drawings Leviathan against the Stalinist regime and Bolshevism.
After the war, Weber continued to produce paintings and drawings critical of the bourgeoisie and the avant-garde. Fear, death, madness and destruction remain the protagonists of his works.
During his career he created more than 200 paintings and 1500 illustrations, about 3000 lithographs.
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/1134/nfzpRCQk9HIjVZA8NRvy5e0zFlKAw-raWU8sZuXssQ30YkP7HzlEMPqI2hWF4-bs_1599060338-172x196_center_100.jpg)
![](https://veryimportantlot.com/cache/catalog/1727/uLio4uuXS7kloMXTi9-4mew-fNSNUQ3qDEv2MjLVX91s3ipGnLEJP9RZmAzmewYl_1623239602-172x196_center_100.jpg)