Contents
►
Editors' Remarks
►
Committed to
Memory
UN Declares
International Holocaust Remembrance Day
►
The New Museum:
Behind the Scenes
A Family Connection
► Art
Focus
New Exhibition:
Montparnasse Déporté
►
Education
►
Global
Teaching; Dynamic
Learning
►
Seminar for Survivors of
the Rwandan Genocide
►
Focusing on
Europe
►
The Names
Database:
A Year Online
►
A Gift of
Color
►
News
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New
Publications
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Friends
Worldwide
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About the Magazine
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Credits
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Back Issues
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by Yehudit Shendar and Eliad Moreh Rosenberg
Marking the historic UN resolution declaring 27 January as International
Holocaust Remembrance Day, this January Yad Vashem’s new Exhibitions
Pavilion is opening its second exhibition, “Montparnasse Déporté” (Montparnasse
Deported).
The exhibition opened last May at the Montparnasse Museum, Paris, in the
presence of French President Jacques Chirac. Portraying for the first time
in France the fate of artists of l’École de Paris (School of Paris), it
focuses on the lives and oeuvre of Jewish painters and sculptors who were
persecuted and ultimately murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators.
In the exhibition are some 150 works of art accompanied by photographs,
original documents and biographies. These pay tribute to the personal
annals of more than 60 artists on display, among them Chaim Soutine,
Rudolf Levy, Adolphe Feder, Otto Freundlich, Max Jacob and Leon Weissberg.
From the beginning of the 20th century until the outbreak of the WWII,
Paris was a vital cultural center, attracting many artists who converged
from all corners of Europe. Seeking the equal civil rights and liberal
atmosphere in France denied them in their home countries, many of these
artists headed for Paris, the arts capital. They settled in the
Montparnasse Quarter, a lively center of activity for artists from all
over the world. In the studios and cafés of Montparnasse, these newly
arrived artists could meet and exchange ideas with the most influential
personalities of the art world, such as Picasso, Chagall, Brancusi,
Modigliani, Fujita, and Diego Rivera. Thus, more than a style or a
movement, l’Ecole de Paris refers to the meeting of artists from different
origins, in the same place, at the same time, with one common objective:
creating art.
With the Nazi occupation of France in 1940, the persecution of Jewish
artists began in earnest. Some artists managed to emigrate or go into
hiding, but most were sent to concentration and death camps. As a result,
the fascinating cultural phenomenon that was l’École de Paris came to an
abrupt end.
The artists of l’École de Paris were not only physically murdered, their
legacy was also fatally reduced to silence; their art burnt or plundered.
One could say that these artists were thus “twice assassinated.” This
exhibition provides a rare glimpse into the vibrant and pulsating world of
Jewish artists on the precipice of the Holocaust, and its display at Yad
Vashem is another link in the museum’s persistent efforts to honor the
memory of artists murdered in the Holocaust.
At the exhibition’s opening in Paris, Simone Veil, Auschwitz survivor and
President of the Fondation pour la Mémoire de la Shoah, emphasized the
importance and meaning of the exhibition: “The exhibition enables us to
estimate the artistic wealth and diversity we have been deprived of by the
Nazi enterprise. By becoming aware not only of their accomplished work,
but also of the work that might have been accomplished, we can measure to
what extent the destruction of all these artists has been an irreparable
loss to mankind.”
The Montparnasse exhibition was augmented with works from Yad Vashem’s
extensive art collection, as well as photographs and documents from its
archives, shedding new light on the artists’ lives. A wall-size collage of
photographs greeting visitors at the entrance gives face to the rather
amorphous official name école de Paris, thus allowing visitors to meet the
artists at the crossroads of life and death—a period when art works
survived even after their creators were murdered by the Nazis.
The exhibition was brought to Yad Vashem in cooperation with le Musée du
Montparnasse, Paris, under the auspices of the French Embassy in Israel,
and was made possible by the generous contribution of: Groupe Segula
Technologies, France; Sylvia and Boris Samujlovic z”l, Brazil and Israel;
Le Comité Francais pour Yad Vashem; Leumi, Israel; and Buchman Foundation
representative Rosine Bron, France.
Yehudit Shendar is Art Department Director and Senior Art Curator and
Eliad Moreh Rosenberg is Associate Curator, Museums Division.
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Georges Ascher (Warsaw 1884-Majdanek 1943), Garden, oil on
canvas
Loan of the Israel Museum, Jerusalem
gift of Caroline and Joseph Gruss, New York

Léon Weissberg (Przeworsk 1894-Majdanek 1943), A Jewish Boy
in Paris (the young Leon Ber), 1926, oil on canvas
Gift of Mrs. Lydie
Lachenal, Paris |