Josef Herman 1911-2000
Tribute to Goya's Black Pictures (aka In Memory of the Fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto, aka Auschwitz), 1974, reworked 1998
oil and mixed media on canvas
119.38 x 91.4 cm
framed: 135.89 x 104.78 cm
framed: 135.89 x 104.78 cm
signed (verso) 'J. Herman: Auschwitz / mixed media'
2017-04
© Josef Herman estate
Photo: Ben Uri Collection
Herman began this work in the late 1970s, reworking it in the 1990s. It was known by a number of titles including 'In Memory of the Fighters of the Warsaw...
Herman began this work in the late 1970s, reworking it in the 1990s. It was known by a number of titles including 'In Memory of the Fighters of the Warsaw Ghetto', 'In Memory of the Holocaust Survivors', 'In Memory of the Holocaust Victims' and 'Tribute to Goya's Black Pictures'. It is related to a preliminary study, which in 1993 was reproduced on the front of his wife Nini's novel 'Vellogria', depicting a grieving woman. Herman wrote in his notebook that he had begun the work as a tribute to the fighters in the Warsaw Ghetto, 'but the longer I worked on it I put in more emotions which wanted to cry out for all the victims of our times: the two million gypsies, the six million Jews etc. The list is too long for a small page.' He later referred to the painting as 'my only painting of suffering and protest'. Herman had long been inspired by Goya: an early watercolour, 'A lecture on Goya', depicted a working-class audience looking at a screen displaying a slide of the Goya self-portrait just glimpsed in the background to his masterly family portrait, 'My Family and I' (1941), painted during his sojourn in Glasgow.
Provenance
Accepted by HM Government in Lieu of Inheritance Tax from the estate of Eleonore Marie Herman, 2017Exhibitions
2017 Art Out of the Bloodlands: A Century of Polish Artists in Britain, Ben Uri Gallery
2018 Acquisitions and Long-Term Loan Highlights Since 2001, Ben Uri Gallery
2019 Outlook: No Return. Polish artists who fled Nazi-dominated Europe to British culture, POSK: Polish Social and Cultural Association’s Gallery
Literature
Rachel Dickson, ed., From Adler to Zuławski: A Century of Polish Artists in Britain (London: Ben Uri Research Unit, 2020), p. 61 (illus. included);Sarah MacDougall ed., Josef Herman: Warsaw, Brussels, Glasgow, London, 1938-44 (London: Ben Uri, 2011), p. 27 (illus. included).
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