Fact : Hitler Was An Amazing Artist

Most people are vaguely familiar with the story of Hitler being a frustrated artist who was denied entry to art school because he wasn't 'good enough'. Unfortunately, that's all most know about Hitler as an artist. In 1908, an 18 year old Hitler moved to Vienna, where he walked the same streets as Freud, Gustav Mahler, Beethoven, Mozart and Egon Schiele, but he did so as one of the city's faceless, teeming poor. He often slept in squalid homeless shelters and under bridges. Intent on becoming an artist, he twice failed the art academy's admission test; his drawing skills were declared "unsatisfactory." A thin, sallow youth, he wasn't cut out for physical labor. With help from a friend, he managed to earn a meager living drawing postcard views of Vienna and selling them to tourists often on sidewalk cafes. 
During his fateful rise to power, Hitler continued to sketch, paint and sculpt copious amounts of art. The accepted theory that he was a failed artist isn't entirely true. If one were to look at most any of the works done by Hitler without knowing who created it, most would find the art satisfactory at the very least. Adolf Hitler left a large amount of impressive work proving his artistic talents. However, these works have essentially become illegal and most have gone underground into the hands of private collectors. Occasionally, an exhibit of his art will pop up in a brave gallery somewhere, only to be bashed as 'evil' and 'degenerate' by the zionist media. When in point of fact, it is often sensitive, beautiful and even, yes, touching. If you can find them for sale, Hitler's paintings start in the $10,000 dollar range and keep going up from there. However, such is the universal public disdain for the man, that if you actually bought a Hitler painting and hung it on your wall you'd best not point to the signature at the bottom when showing it to house guests.
These examples of the Unknown Hitler are just another view of the biased and slanted way history is written - and enforced - by the "winners". Hitler might not have made much money from his paintings but another side of his creative powers was used to to write his self-published best-selling autobiography 'Mein Kampf'. A book that sold millions of copies and ironically helped fund his Nazi empire. 






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