German Refugee Artists to Britain since 1900
Forthcoming exhibition
Albert Einstein
etching on paper
29.5 x 24
(lower left): John Philipp; (lower right): [signed by] A Einstein
1988-46
Photo: Ben Uri Gallery
Family anecdote records that Einstein’s sitting in 1929 took place at the artist's request, after he visited the physicist in Berlin, sending up his portfolio by way of introduction. A...
Family anecdote records that Einstein’s sitting in 1929 took place at the artist's request, after he visited the physicist in Berlin, sending up his portfolio by way of introduction. A letter from Enstein shows his admiration for the resulting portrait. Einstein fled Germany in 1933, lecturing in Oxford and Glasgow in June, and meeting Winston Churchill. In September, Einstein spent three weeks in Norfolk, at the invitation of Oliver Locker-Lampson MP, protected by twoarmed women secretaries. During this period, Jacob Epstein modelled his bust of Einstein, noting how he ‘resembled the ageing Rembrandt’. In October, 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. Einstein's migratory narrative is a powerful reminder that even his international status and achievements could not save him from such a forced journey during the Nazi era.