Art for No One (German edition): 19331945
By (Author) Ilka Voermann
Contributions by E. Atlan
Contributions by P. Chametzky
Contributions by V. Hein
Contributions by K. Hille
Contributions by I. Jessen
Contributions by C. C. Klingshr-Leroy
Contributions by K. Krenzlin
Contributions by M. Oucherif
Contributions by O. Peters
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
26th May 2022
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Paintings and painting
European history
Political activism / Political engagement
709.4309044
Hardback
352
Width 205mm, Height 270mm
Between 1933 and 1945, artistic creativity within the German Reich was almost totally under the control of the National Socialist state. Many artists emigrated. But what about the ones who remained in Germany Under what social and economic conditions did they focus on their art and what options for activity were open to them For artists who did not conform to the system, the years of National Socialism were an era of standstill and isolation. This volume questions this blanket judgement through 15 artist personalities and shows how differently they dealt with ostracism, the lack of audience and the absence of exchange, what possibilities they had for selling and exhibiting their works and to what extent they adapted to the requirements of the Nazi regime. Some 150 paintings, sculptures, drawings and photographs reflect graphically the contradictions of this time.
Ilka Voermann is a curator at the Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt.