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Victor Hageman
1868-1940

Victor Hageman 1868-1940

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Victor Hageman, The Emigrants, c. 1910

Victor Hageman 1868-1940

The Emigrants, c. 1910
oil on canvas
122 x 155 cm
framed: 160 x 191 cm
signed (lower left) 'Victor Hageman' and inscribed (verso) 'Descendants Israelites'
2013-11
Photo: Bridgeman images
A socially-conscious realist painter, Hageman specialized in studies of migrants and particularly, of his Russian-Jewish neighbours. The distinctive, dark-haired young woman facing outwards (on the right of the canvas) also...
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A socially-conscious realist painter, Hageman specialized in studies of migrants and particularly, of his Russian-Jewish neighbours. The distinctive, dark-haired young woman facing outwards (on the right of the canvas) also sat for at least two further separate studies.

Painted on a monumental scale, The Emigrants depicts three generations of one family gathered at the point of exile, their emotive expressions capturing the trauma of forced migration. In 1928 Hageman exhibited this work in Antwerp under the title ‘Jewish Family’, while an inscription on the reverse of the canvas reading ‘Descendants Israelites’ specifically references Jewish exile. Another painting of the same title is in the Museum in Antwerp, and further works by Hageman on this theme can be found in the museums of Brussels, Namur and Ghent.

The painting originally belonged to the Speth family in Antwerp, owners of the Red Star Line which arranged for many Jewish emigrants to travel to America.

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Provenance

presented by Alfred and Ronald Cohen of the Trafalgar Galleries London

Exhibitions

2015 Out of Chaos – Ben Uri: 100 Years in London, Somerset House

2016 100 for 100: Ben Uri Past, Present & Future, Christie's South Kensington

2018 Exodus: masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection, Bushey Museum

2019 Migrations: masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection Gloucester Museum


Literature

Rachel Dickson and Sarah MacDougall, eds., Out of Chaos: Ben Uri; 100 Years in London (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2015) pp. 38-39;
Rachel Dickson and Sarah MacDougall, eds., Ben Uri: 100 Years in London - Art, Identity, Migration (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2015), pp. 8-9 (detail)
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