During the war years, the volume of new prints Escher produced fell sharply. He lacked inspiration and he had other things to worry about. But that does not mean he was not engaged in any creative work. During the war, he threw himself into his regular division drawings, constantly devising new variants for filling the plane with regular patterns. Between the outbreak of the Second World War in 1939 and the Dutch liberation in May 1945, he produced about 35 new drawings.
If you look at this series, the war seems remote. Even in those years his work is teeming with birds, fish, reptiles, frogs, insects, flowers and shells. Only with the drawing that he made during Christmas 1941, with angels and devils, does he seem to be saying something about the bizarre situation in which the world was at that time. He also used the subject for his wooden sphere full of angels and devils that he cut in early 1942.* With a bit of imagination, the last drawing from the war years, from September 1944, can also be regarded as a metaphor. Together, the red and grey butterflies form a deep tunnel. An abyss of misery with which Escher seems to be anticipating the failure of Operation Market Garden at the end of September and the famine that would ravage the Netherlands in the winter of 1944-1945. Some extremely difficult months ensued, during which the Escher family fell on hard times too. He no longer worked between this drawing and the Liberation. He wrote about it in his diary:
‘That was the hardest thing I ever experienced: my time was totally and utterly taken up with providing for the household; a materialism that (however ideal because it mostly concerned my family) almost drove me crazy.’**
Diary 1944
Sources
[*] Wim Hazeu, M.C. Escher, Een biografie, Meulenhoff, 1998, blz. 279.
[**] Wim Hazeu, M.C. Escher, Een biografie, Meulenhoff, 1998, blz. 295.