Claus Friedrich Bergen (18 April 1885 – 4 October 1964) was a German illustrator and painter, best known for his depictions of naval warfare in World War I. Biography and illustration of pictures by Bergen held at NMM, Greenwich. German Wikipedia article on Claus Bergen.
Beginning in 1907, Bergen created more than 450 illustrations for Karl May's popular adventure tales. Continually printed and re-printed in books and periodicals, Bergen's depictions of the Old West, India, Arabia, and other exotic locales came to be widely associated with May's stories. In 1910 his illustrations were exhibited at the Wereldtentoonstelling in Brussels.
He travelled extensively, visiting Norway, England, the Mediterranean and America while exhibiting and furthering his training. He developed a specialty of painting naval subjects, as well as fishing scenes and coastal views. A series of paintings of the Cornish fishing village of Polperro attracted particular attention.
In June and July 1917, Bergen took the unprecedented step of joining the crew of the submarine , under Kapitänleutnant Hans Rose, on an Atlantic combat patrol.website Munich Submariners Association 1926 The series of paintings that resulted is often considered to be among his finest work.
In the interwar period he painted numerous officially-commissioned large scale land- and seascapes, while his friendship with commanders such as Erich Raeder and Karl Doenitz led to continuing work for the German Navy.
Bergen's brother Otto was an aviator in the Great War, and the two were childhood friends of Ernst Udet, one of Germany's top fighter pilots. These associations led to Bergen painting many aviation scenes, and commissions within Germany's aviation industry. Several of his works were used to decorate the interior of the giant Dornier Do X luxury flying boat, which first flew in 1929.
Claus Bergen joined the NSDAP in 1922.Ernst Klee: Das Kulturlexikon zum Dritten Reich. Wer war was vor und nach 1945. S. Fischer, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 44. During the Second World War he was placed on the Nazis' "God-gifted list", which gave him protected status as a cultural asset, thereby exempting him from military service. Several of his works appeared in the Nazi-sponsored Great German Art Exhibitions, held annually at the House of German Art in Munich from 1937 to 1944. His painting Against England (1940) was purchased by Adolf Hitler for 12,000 Reichsmark, and other works of his were purchased by other top Nazi officials;GermanArtGallery guide, product descriptions for 'Gegen England' & 'Im Atlantik'; http://www.germanartgallery.eu/en/Webshop/0/product/info/Claus_Bergen,_Gegen_England&id=155 however, none of Bergen's work displays anti-Semitic or exaggeratedly pro-Aryan themes. At the war's end, he was not prosecuted for his Nazi associations.
Newly discovered documents from the German Bundesarchiv (R43/3575) Newsletter April 2021, German Art Gallery show that Hitler bought at the Great German Art Exhibition 1937, The Bombardment of Almeria for 7,500 Reichsmark. The work was destinated for the Reichskanzlei in Berlin. The Nazis' counter piece to Guernica can be seen in the United Kingdom, as it was seized in 1945 by the British and, despite requests for restitution,Germans call for return of paintings in the National Maritime Museum seized by British troops [5] is held by the National Maritime MuseumThe German Pocket Battleship 'Admiral Scheer' Bombarding the Spanish Coast, 1937 [6] in Greenwich, London.
In 1963 he gave his painting The Atlantic to President Kennedy (now displayed at the Kennedy Library in Boston) and donated a painting of Admiral Nelson's flagship to the British Admiralty. The following year, his paintings illustrated the naval section of Life magazine's series on the First World War.
In the late 1970s a dramatic Bergen painting was used on the box of the popular board game Bismarck
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He continued painting until his death on 4 October 1964, in Lenggries, Bavaria.
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