Joachim Ringelnatz
- Sort Name
- Ringelnatz, Joachim
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- Type
- Person
- Gender
- Male
- Date of birth
- 1883-08-07
- Place of birth
- Wurzen
- Date of death
- 1934-11-17
- Place of death
- Berlin
Wikipedia
Joachim Ringelnatz is the pen name of the German author and painter Hans Bötticher (7 August 1883 in Wurzen, Saxony – 17 November 1934 in Berlin). From 1894 to 1900 he lived with his family in the Gottschedstrasse 40 in Leipzig.
His pen name Ringelnatz is usually explained as a dialect expression for an animal, possibly a variant of Ringelnatter, German for grass snake or more probably the seahorse for winding ("ringeln") its tail around objects. The seahorse is called Ringelnass (nass = wet) by mariners, an occupation to which he felt kinship. He was a sailor in his youth and spent the First World War in the Navy on a minesweeper.
In the 1920s and 1930s, he worked as a Kabarettist, i.e., a kind of satirical stand-up comedian.
He is best known for his wry poems using word play and sometimes bordering on nonsense poetry. Some of them are similar to Christian Morgenstern's, but more satirical in tone and occasionally subversive. His most popular character is the anarchic sailor Kuddel Daddeldu with his drunken antics and disdain for authority.
In his final thirteen years Ringelnatz was also a dedicated and prolific visual artist. The bulk of his art went missing during World War II, but over 200 paintings and drawings survived. In the 1920s some of his work was exhibited at the Akademie der Künste along with that of his contemporaries Otto Dix and George Grosz. Ringelnatz illustrated his own novel called "...liner Roma..." (1923), the title of which is a doubly truncated "Berliner Roman" (Berlin novel), for "Berlin novels usually have no decent beginning and no proper ending." ("Berliner Romane haben meist keinen ordentlichen Anfang und kein rechtes Ende.")
In 1933, he was banned by the Nazi government as a "degenerate artist".
Ringelnatz's widow Leonharda Pieper married Julius Gescher after Ringelnatz's death, and their son Norbert managed Ringelnatz's legacy and assembled a collection. Norbert donated the collection to the Joachim Ringelnatz Museum in Cuxhaven in 2019.
Annotation
Joachim Ringelnatz is the pen name of the German author and painter Hans Bötticher.
Last modified: 2020-08-12 (revision #20367)
Editions
Name | Format | ISBN | Release Date |
---|---|---|---|
Ringelnatz in kleiner Auswahl | Paperback | ? | 1966 |
Die wilde Miß vom Ohio und andere ungewöhnliche Geschichten | Hardcover | ? | 1979 |
Relationships
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Trüber Tag
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote An M.
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Kindersand
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Landregen
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Am Barren
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Mißmut
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Ringkampf
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Schenken
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Spielball
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Babys
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Wirrsal
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Klimmzug
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Boxkampf
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Heimatlose
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Aufgebung
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Rauch
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Rheinkähne
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Die Krähe
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Hamburg
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Augsburg
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Logik
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Bremen
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Thar
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Im Park
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Heilsarmee
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Pinguine
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Schläge
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Zu dir
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Vom Tabarz
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Beinchen
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Ehrgeiz
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Kühe
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Mannheim
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Arm Ding
- Joachim Ringelnatz wrote Was dann?
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- Last Modified
- 2024-11-06