Culture under duress: art and the Holocaust
TitreCulture under duress: art and the Holocaust
Auteur
Call number940.5318/0223
N° d'objet04298f
Lieu de publicationEdmonton, Alberta, Canada
EditeurUniversity of Alberta Press
Année de publication
2000
Paginationpp84-96
MatérielArticle
ISBN0888643373
NotesArticle from the book 'The Holocaust's ghost' pp84-96
Description
Paradoxically, the Holocaust had one positive feature: it encouraged the production of art by its victims. Its significance was not fully aknowledged until the 1980s. Today only about 20% of it survives. It includes portraits, landscapes, still lifes, caricatures and abstracts. Germans would occasionally commission portraits as gifts to their families or superiors. As well, inmates often bartered art for food, clothing, better quarters or more lenient treatment, Conclusion: "Holocaust art enables us to study virtually all aspects of the Holocaust."