- Otto Freundlich
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Otto Freundlich
Cover of the exhibition program: Degenerate Art 1937Born July 10, 1878
Stolp, GermanyDied March 9, 1943
Majdanek, PolandNationality German Field Painting and sculpture Otto Freundlich (July 10, 1878 – March 9, 1943) was a German painter and sculptor of Jewish origin and one of the first generation of abstract artists.
Life
Freundlich was born in Stolp, Province of Pomerania, Prussia, and studied dentistry before deciding to become an artist. He went to Paris in 1908, living in Montmartre in Bateau Lavoir near to Pablo Picasso, Braque and others. In 1914 he returned to Germany. After World War I, he became politically active as a member November Group. In 1919, he organized the first Dada - exhibition in Cologne with Max Ernst and Johannes Theodor Baargeld. In 1925, he joined the Abstraction-Création group.
After 1925, Freundlich lived and worked mainly in France. In Germany, his work was condemned by the Nazis as degenerate and removed form public display. Some works were seized and displayed at the infamous Nazi exhibition of degenerate art including his monumental sculpture Der Neue Mensch (The New Man) which was photographed unsympathetically and used as the cover illustration of the exhibition catalogue. Der Neue Mensch was never recovered and is assumed to have been destroyed. One of his sculptures has been recovered, from a Berlin dig, and put on display at the Neues Museum.[1][2][3]
With outbreak of World War II, Freundlich was interned by the French authorities but released, for a time, under the influence of Pablo Picasso. In 1943 he was arrested and deported to Majdanek Concentration Camp, where he was murdered on the day he arrived.
References
External links
- A Forcing of Barriers - A staged encounter between Freundlich and Nazi sculptor, Arno Breker, conceived by Per-Oskar Leu for the online magazine, Triple Canopy.
- Biographic Details
Categories:- 1878 births
- 1943 deaths
- People from Słupsk
- German Jews
- German painters
- Jewish painters
- Modern painters
- Majdanek concentration camp victims
- Painters who died in Nazi concentration camps
- People from the Province of Pomerania
- German civilians killed in World War II
- German artist stubs
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