Edmond Guilliaume

Wilhelm I, King of Prussia, from Les Génies de la Mort

1870
Color lithograph on ivory wove paper
57.8 × 46 cm (22.8 × 18.1 in)

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FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG

After the creation of the German Empire, Wilhelm I was named kaiser (emperor) of the unified German state. He is thus depicted as the aristocratic twin to his prime minister, Otto von Bismarck. Edmond Guilliaume ironically gave Wilhelm a crown of leaves like an ancient hero, but that association is superseded by the rest of his face and body. Underneath his confident eyes lies a decaying skull, and his body is replaced by the rapacious, blood-sucking form of a bat. Combined with the nighttime destruction of the church in the distance, Wilhelm represents the very essence of the coldhearted, cold-blooded enemy.

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