Jacob Epstein 1880-1959
Albert Einstein, 1933
bronze
(height) 45 cm
2022-08
Further images
After Hitler’s accession to the German Chancellorship in 1933, the renowned German-Jewish physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955), who was on a lecture tour in the USA, was unable to return to...
After Hitler’s accession to the German Chancellorship in 1933, the renowned German-Jewish physicist Albert Einstein (1879-1955), who was on a lecture tour in the USA, was unable to return to Germany and spent some months in Europe. He came to England in June and held lectures in Oxford and Glasgow, also meeting Winston Churchill. In September, Einstein spent three weeks at a secluded army camp near Cromer, Norfolk, at the invitation of Oliver Locker-Lampson MP. During this period, he also sat to Epstein for two hours each morning. Epstein noted how 'Einstein appeared dressed very comfortably in a pullover with his wild hair floating in the wind. His glance contained a mixture of the humane, the humorous, and the profound. This was a combination that delighted me. He resembled the ageing Rembrandt'. However, Einstein left to take up a professorship at Princeton in October, before the bust was completed. Before leaving for America, Einstein gave a speech in the Royal Albert Hall, attended by a crowd of 10,000, praising democracy and warning of the dangers ahead. Other casts are in the Tate, Science Museum, the University of Liverpool, the City Art Gallery, Birmingham, the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, and a number in private collections.