Bad Sports

A version of this piece was initially posted on my Substack, Artfully Exercising.


In November 1935 and July 1936, the German magazine Arbeiter-Illustrierte-Zeitung (AIZ) published features on the 1936 Berlin Olympic Games, which were hosted by Adolf Hitler’s fascist Nazi regime. AIZ differed from other German periodicals, in that their coverage was the furthest effort from a promotional take on the games. They offered a critical and downright scathing retort of the Nazi’s “sportswashing” propaganda efforts.

AIZ is most notable for artist John Heartfield’s politically charged photomontages, which are a technical combination of two or more photographs to form a single image. Heartfield’s use of photomontage to create monstrous and sardonic assessments of the human condition is a practice that has been heavily utilized ever since in both fine art and editorial publishing. Photomontage enabled Heartfield (and other artists) to produce incredibly grotesque and acerbic compositions, that had a chilling effect because they felt lifelike due to the incorporation of traditional photography. The juxtaposition of realness and surreal elements is indicative of Heartfield’s intent to shock the public and critique authority.

While the Olympic games are both a literal and symbolic showing of physical fortitude, Heartfield’s Olympic related imagery is antithetical to any signs of human strength. There are two particular Heartfield photomontages that best represent the fallacy of the Nazi regime: Program of the Olympics and Olympic Guests — Forward March!

An visual essay/editorial from a German magazine, which in bold letters at the top reads: "PROGRAMM DER OLYMPIADE BERLIN 1936;" and features 8 panels of photomontages depicting fictional and satirical Olympic events that are critical of the Nazi regime's brutality and corruption.

Program of the Olympics is an eight panel visual essay of fictionalized Olympic events that Heartfield envisioned to be in line with the Nazi’s violence and depravity. It was published in a November 1935 issue of AIZ, as a seething call to attention regarding the hypocrisy of having the Olympics be hosted by a despot-led regime that was committing numerous atrocities. Heartfield’s invented games include “tug-of-war” (with Nazis dragging a Jewish victim along the ground) and “bodybuilding” (where malnourished concentration camp victims are shown being forced into harsh labor).

Berlin was chosen to host the Olympic games prior to Hitler’s ascension in 1933, and the Nazis were initially not keen to the idea of having the games in their country. However, they understood propaganda well, and knew it could be a way for them to rehab their negative image that was forming internationally. Olympic Guests — Forward March! unmasks the Nazi’s attempt to portray a diplomatic identity during the Olympic games. The photomontage depicts Nazi Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, herding athletes who have Olympic rings through their noses like cattle. Above them is an arch that reads, “Come and see Germany!”

An visual essay/editorial from a German magazine. Across the top is an archway with the phrase: "come and see Germany!" Below is Nazi Minister of Propaganda, Joseph Goebbels, herding athletes who have Olympic rings through their noses like cattle.

With the United States’ pivot into authoritarianism, white nationalism and state sanctioned violence, it is not a shock to see the Trump administration’s appropriation of Nazi imagery and propaganda. The United States stirred up an ample amount of controversy during the recent 2026 Winter Olympics; and is receiving pushback for its role as the host of the upcoming FIFA World Cup tournament. Similarly to Hitler’s xenophobic ethnic cleansing campaign and militaristic governing, the Trump administration’s policies are at odds with the theme of global diplomacy that events like the Olympics and World Cup claim to embody.


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