Interned Artists: Ben Uri and the 80th Anniversary of Internment
Forthcoming exhibition
Suburban Scene (Huyton Camp)
watercolour and pencil on paper
35.5 x 50.5
(verso): Lomnitz
1987-257b
@Alfred Lomnitz estate
Photo: Bridgeman images
In June 1940 Lom was one of many German-speaking refugees, reclassified as enemy aliens and interned at Huyton, a recently completed housing estate outside Liverpool. This suburban scene is probably...
In June 1940 Lom was one of many German-speaking refugees, reclassified as enemy aliens and interned at Huyton, a recently completed housing estate outside Liverpool. This suburban scene is probably a depiction of the Huyton camp, where Lom's fellow internees included fellow emigre artists Hugo Dachinger, Walter Nessler and Samson Schames, who all also produced works within the camp. Shortly after his release, Lom published an illustrated autobiographical account of his internment, 'Never Mind, Mr Lom' (Macmillan, 1941) with a cover design of a figure silhouetted against coils of barbed wire.
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