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Disruptors: Fractured Images and Migrant Wordl
14 May - 4 September 2026

Disruptors: Fractured Images and Migrant Wordl

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Kurt Schwitters, für Frau Fränkel, 1927

Kurt Schwitters 1887-1948

für Frau Fränkel, 1927
collage mounted on paper
7.6 x 5 cm
inscribed 'für Frau Fränkel von Kurt Schwitters, 1928'
2019-08
Photo: Ben Uri Gallery and Museum
1887, Hanover, Germany–1948, Kendal, England Immigrated to the UK in 1940 The experimental work that made Schwitters a key figure in German avant-garde circles also made him a target of...
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1887, Hanover, Germany–1948, Kendal, England

Immigrated to the UK in 1940


The experimental work that made Schwitters a key figure in German avant-garde circles also made him a target of the Nazis. In the 1930s, his contract with Hanover City Council was terminated and his work appeared in the infamous Degenerate Art exhibition. In 1937 he fled Germany for Norway to escape interrogation by the Gestapo. Three years later, as the German army advanced north, Schwitters escaped once more, arriving in Edinburgh aboard a Norwegian icebreaker. Within days of landing in 1940, he was detained and sent to an internment camp on the Isle of Man. This quintessential example of the avant-garde use of scraps of paper is an intimate gesture made for Schwitters’s friend, the artist Elsa Fraenkel (represented in the Ben Uri collection). Both would soon become refugees from Nazism. The small work layers tickets and fragments of typography to recall their journeys to Paris in the 1920s, loosening language into image and evoking a sense of travel.


Ben Uri Collection

Purchased from the family of Else Fraenkel, 2019


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Provenance

Purchased from the family of Else Fraenkel 2019

Exhibitions

Schwitters in Britain (tour);Schwitters in Britain

Literature

Karin Orchard and Susanne Meyer-Büser, eds., Kurt Schwitters: Catalogue Raisonné, Vol. 1, 1923-36 (Hanover: Hatje Cantz Verlag, 2000), cat. no. 1515a; Schwitters in Britain (London: Tate Publishing, 2013), p. 154.
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