The Zeppelin

The Zeppelin (Dutch: De zeppelin) is a 1933 painting by the Dutch painter Carel Willink. It shows a street corner where a group of men look up to the sky and wave to a zeppelin. The airship is the Graf Zeppelin. The location is the corner of the streets Stadhouderskade and P.C. Hooftstraat in Amsterdam. After the outbreak of World War II the painting was sometimes interpreted as prophetic, as it had been made the same year Adolf Hitler came to power and the zeppelin could be seen as a symbol for Germany. Willink was however unwilling to comment on any such interpretation, instead explaining: "The heart of my work is a deadly love for reality".

The Zeppelin

The Zeppelin (Dutch: De zeppelin) is a 1933 painting by the Dutch painter Carel Willink. It shows a street corner where a group of men look up to the sky and wave to a zeppelin. The airship is the Graf Zeppelin. The location is the corner of the streets Stadhouderskade and P.C. Hooftstraat in Amsterdam. After the outbreak of World War II the painting was sometimes interpreted as prophetic, as it had been made the same year Adolf Hitler came to power and the zeppelin could be seen as a symbol for Germany. Willink was however unwilling to comment on any such interpretation, instead explaining: "The heart of my work is a deadly love for reality".