Jewish-American artists and the Holocaust: the responses of two generations
TitleJewish-American artists and the Holocaust: the responses of two generations
Author
Call number291.1783315/0001
Object number04495P
Place of publicationNew York, New York, United States
PublisherBerghahn Books
Year of publication
2010
Physical descriptionpp342-349
MaterialArticle
ISBN9781571813022
NotesArticle from the book "In God's name: genocide and religion in the twentieth century" pp342-349
Description
Artists working in the aftermath of the Holocaust could only deal with their knowledge of mass murder by avoiding concrete images and opted for abstract or mythological figures. Influenced by left-wing politics artists also turned to Greek tragedy to express primitive forces and terror. Conversely more contemporary artists invoked the notion of 'tikkun olam'. Thus art is conceived as part of a healing process - they see their task as being restorative and forgiving, yet insist on being witnesses to the specific event of the Holocaust .