Approximately 70 drawings are exhibited. The works range in date from 1914 to 1930, all but five were executed in the 1920s. From caricature-like figure drawings and nudes to bustling street scenes, the works in the show display some of the aritst's most politically pointed commentaries. Included is Gorsz's drawing for the coverplate of Die Rauber (The Robbers), a collection of lithographs after the play by Friedrich Schiller and one of Grosz's most infamous political works.