Download pptx - Holocaust + art

Transcript
Page 1: Holocaust + art

The Artist, Collective Memory, and Crisis of the Natural and Unnatural Kind

January 27, 2010

A Lecture to Jagalonian University Cultural Studies Program, Class in Visuality

Dr. Lori KentFulbright Fellow, Academy of Fine Arts

Leadbelly (1930s) “Ox Drivin’ Blues” from the album “King of the 12-String Guitar”

Page 2: Holocaust + art

From an artist’s point of view….

Where does art come from?

Page 3: Holocaust + art

Where does art come from?

memory? Imagination? experience?

Representation? Passion?re-presentation ?

???

Page 4: Holocaust + art

Where does art come from?

memory? Imagination? experience?

Representation? Passion?re-presentation ?

???

Page 5: Holocaust + art

Johannes Vermeer, Woman Holding a Balance, c. 1664

Page 6: Holocaust + art

Where does art come from?

memory? Imagination? experience?

Representation? Passion?re-presentation ?

???

Page 7: Holocaust + art

Edgar Degas, Ballet Rehearsal on Stage, c. 1874,

Page 8: Holocaust + art

Where does art come from?

memory? Imagination? experience?

Representation? Passion?re-presentation ?

???

Page 9: Holocaust + art

Matthew Barney, Film Still from the Cremaster Series, c. 1992

Page 10: Holocaust + art

Hieronymus Bosch , The Last Judgment, c. 1482

Page 11: Holocaust + art

“All that you can imagine, you already know” - Sir Stephen Spender

Page 12: Holocaust + art

Where does art come from?

memory? Imagination? experience?

Representation? Passion?re-presentation ?

???

Page 13: Holocaust + art

Francisco de Goya’s Disasters of War Series The National Museum, Krakow 1807-14 Peninsula WarCreated in 1812-14 Published in 1863

Page 14: Holocaust + art

Goya With Reason or Without

Page 15: Holocaust + art

Goya What Courage

Page 16: Holocaust + art

Goya They Do Not Want To

Page 17: Holocaust + art

Goya And There is No Remedy

Page 18: Holocaust + art

Goya What More Can Be Done

Page 19: Holocaust + art

Goya Bury Them and Be Silent

Page 20: Holocaust + art

HURRICANE KATRINA August 29, 2005

Page 21: Holocaust + art
Page 22: Holocaust + art

Riverboat on MIssissippi

Page 23: Holocaust + art
Page 24: Holocaust + art

French Quarter “Shotgun” house

Page 25: Holocaust + art

Mardi Gras beads

Page 26: Holocaust + art

Café DuMonde at late night

Page 27: Holocaust + art

Lucky Dogs on Bourbon Street

Page 28: Holocaust + art

Riverfront at Night

Page 29: Holocaust + art

80% of the City flooded

Page 30: Holocaust + art
Page 31: Holocaust + art
Page 32: Holocaust + art
Page 33: Holocaust + art
Page 34: Holocaust + art
Page 35: Holocaust + art
Page 36: Holocaust + art

Malcolm McClay

Page 37: Holocaust + art

Malcolm McClay

0 %

Malcolm McClay Lino Cut Print

Page 38: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital Print

Page 39: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital PrintMalcolm McClay

Page 40: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital PrintMalcolm McClay

Page 41: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital PrintMalcolm McClay

Page 42: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital PrintMalcolm McClay

Page 43: Holocaust + art

Untitled(2007)Archival Digital PrintMalcolm McClay

Page 44: Holocaust + art

Generic ArtSolutions

Page 45: Holocaust + art
Page 46: Holocaust + art
Page 47: Holocaust + art
Page 48: Holocaust + art
Page 49: Holocaust + art

Floodlines Debra Howell

Page 50: Holocaust + art

Floodlines Krista Jurisch

Page 51: Holocaust + art

Floodlines Jan Gilbert

Page 52: Holocaust + art

http://artinaction-nola.blogspot.com/

Page 53: Holocaust + art

Floodwall by Jana Napoli

Page 54: Holocaust + art

http://www.floodwall.org

Page 55: Holocaust + art

http://www.floodwall.org

What will come out of Haiti?

Page 56: Holocaust + art

Children’s Art after the 2005 Indonesian Tsunami

Page 57: Holocaust + art

This painting was drawn by a child from a town close to the epicenter, where 8,200 people drowned in 20 minutes

Page 58: Holocaust + art

They also show the effect on property – and how some people survived the huge wave.

Page 59: Holocaust + art

Sri Lanka was a holiday paradise for holidaymakers before the tsunami..

Page 60: Holocaust + art
Page 61: Holocaust + art
Page 62: Holocaust + art

Source http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_pictures/4075970.stm

Page 63: Holocaust + art

The Holocaust

Page 64: Holocaust + art

The Holocaust

Camp ArtSurvivor Memory-Based Art

Nazi Propaganda Art“Degenerate” Art

Page 65: Holocaust + art

. Painting of Königsgraben from the ceiling of the penal company barrack at Birkenau.

Page 66: Holocaust + art
Page 67: Holocaust + art
Page 68: Holocaust + art
Page 69: Holocaust + art
Page 70: Holocaust + art
Page 71: Holocaust + art
Page 72: Holocaust + art
Page 73: Holocaust + art

Mayer KirshenblattGalacia Museum in Krakow

http://www.thejewishmuseum.org

Page 74: Holocaust + art

Town Panorama (1994) Opatow Poland or “Apt” in Yiddish

Page 75: Holocaust + art

Mother Giving Birth to My Brother Vadye (1994)

Page 76: Holocaust + art

The Kitchen (1994)

Page 77: Holocaust + art

The Pisher (1994)

Page 78: Holocaust + art

Jadwiga Washing Laundry (1992)

Page 79: Holocaust + art

Mother Blessing the Sabbath Candles (1995)

Page 80: Holocaust + art

The Gramaphone (1999)

Page 81: Holocaust + art

Synagogue (1994)

Page 82: Holocaust + art

Town Panorama (1994)

Page 83: Holocaust + art

Market Day (1992)

Page 84: Holocaust + art

Market Day (1992)

Page 85: Holocaust + art

The Kleptomaniac Slipping a Fish Down Her Bosom (1995)

Page 86: Holocaust + art

New Bermedresh: Playing Soccer (1992)

Page 87: Holocaust + art

Moyre Shimhe’s Khayder (1991)

Page 88: Holocaust + art

The Boy in the White Pajamas (1992)

Page 89: Holocaust + art
Page 90: Holocaust + art
Page 91: Holocaust + art

“We shall discover and encourage the artists who are able to impress upon the State of the German people the cultural stamp of the Germanic race . . . in their origin and in the picture which they present they are the expressions of the soul and the ideals of the community."

(Hitler, Party Day speech, 1935)

Page 92: Holocaust + art

Nazi Approved Art

Page 93: Holocaust + art

Arno Brecker Preparedness

Page 94: Holocaust + art

Adolph Wissel (1939) Family from Kahlenberg

Page 95: Holocaust + art

Ernst Leiberman (1939) By the Water

Page 96: Holocaust + art

Marc Chagall (1915) The Kiss

Page 97: Holocaust + art

Ghetto and Camp Art

Page 98: Holocaust + art

BackgroundPrior to World War II, Siwek studied at the Kraków Academy of Fine Arts and worked for the Kraków Railway Headquarters.

Arrest and Deportation to AuschwitzHe was arrested for resistance on January 14, 1940 and sent to Montelupic prison.  October 8, 1940, Siwek was deported to Auschwitz, where he was assigned prisoner number 5826.

Art Produced at AuschwitzHe was initially assigned to hard labor in the stone quarries and became emaciated and ill.  Siwek was then sent to the prisoner infirmary, where fellow artist and prisoner Leon Turalski helped secure him an easier labor assignment with the painters labor detail.  May 1941 through September 1943, Siwek produced calligraphy, �portraits, landscape paintings, and hunting scenes for the SS. In addition to portraits of the SS families, he did portraits, in secret, of over 2000 prisoners.

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK

Page 99: Holocaust + art

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK Interrogation in Cell Block 11

Page 100: Holocaust + art

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK A Group of New Arrivals

Page 101: Holocaust + art

http://remember.org/then-and-now/tn04.html

Page 102: Holocaust + art

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK Summary Court Marshall

Page 103: Holocaust + art

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK Selection at Apel [Roll Call]

Page 104: Holocaust + art

WŁADYSŁAW SIWEK Arrival of Soviet POWs

Page 105: Holocaust + art

Janina Tollik A Street in the Women’s Camp

Page 106: Holocaust + art

Jerzy Potrzebowski Entrance to the Krankenbau (Hospital)

Page 107: Holocaust + art

Jerzy Potrzebowski

Page 108: Holocaust + art

Mieczyslaw Koscielniak, from the series: "A Day in the Life of a Woman Prisoner"

“NIGHT…. A brick has come loose from the low wall separating out cell from the next where other larvae sleep, moan, and dream under the blankets that cover them – these are shrouds covering them for they are dead., today, tomorrow what does it matter,… We feel that we teeter on the edge of a dark pit, a bottomless void – it is the hole of the night where we struggle furiously, struggle against another nightmare, that of our real death.”*

Page 109: Holocaust + art

Zofia Rosensztrauch The Last Execution

Page 110: Holocaust + art

Mieczysław Kościelniak

Page 111: Holocaust + art

Unknown Artist (1944) Portrait of Albert Frecke

You don’t have to be an artist to draw.

Create a small scene fromyour life, at any age, that is memorable.

Use imagery only, no text.


Recommended