Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Used his art as weapon

- By Jill Lawless

Gustav Metzger, whose concept of “auto-destructiv­e art” inspired The Who’s Pete Townshend to smash his guitars, has died at age 90.

Publicist Erica Bolton said Metzger died Wednesday at his London home.

Born to Polish Jewish parents in Nuremberg, Germany in 1926, Metzger was one of thousands of “Kindertran­sport” children brought to Britain from Nazi-occupied Europe in 1939. Most of his family died in the Holocaust.

Metzger studied art in Cambridge, London, Antwerp and Oxford and also became politicall­y engaged, active in the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmamen­t and the anti-war group the Committee of 100. In 1961, he was briefly imprisoned with philosophe­r Bertrand Russell and other members of the group for encouragin­g civil disobedien­ce.

In 1959, Metzger produced a manifesto for “auto-destructiv­e art,” which he described as “a desperate last-minute subversive political weapon” against capitalism and consumeris­m. The idea was to meld destructio­n and creation.

Townshend studied under Metzger and has said the artist inspired him to destroy guitars onstage at the climax of The Who’s 1960s shows. Psychedeli­c projection­s by the artist were used as a backdrop during shows by The Who and Cream.

Metzger said the seeds of his art were sown in his German childhood.

“When I saw the Nazis march, I saw machinelik­e people and the power of the Nazi state,” he told The Guardian in 2012. “Auto-destructiv­e art is to do with rejecting power.”

Metzger used varied materials in his work, including paper, cardboard, trees, chemicals and cars.

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