- Jankel Adler
Jankel Adler (
July 26 ,1895 –April 25 ,1949 ) was a Polish painter and printmaker.Biography
He was born as the seventh of ten children in
Tuszyn , a suburb ofŁódź . In 1912 he began training as an engraver with his uncle inBelgrade . He moved in 1914 to Germany where he lived for a time with his sister inBarmen . There he studied at the college of arts and crafts with professor Gustav Wiethücher.From 1918-1919 he went back to Łódź, where he was joint founder of a group of avant-garde artists. In 1920 he returned briefly to Berlin; in 1921 he returned to Barmen, and in 1922 he moved to
Düsseldorf . There he became a teacher at the Academy of Arts, and became acquainted withPaul Klee , who influenced his work. A painting by Adler received a gold medal at the exhibition “German art Düsseldorf” in 1928.In 1929 and 1930 he went on study trips in
Mallorca and other places inSpain . During the election campaign of July 1932 he published with a group of leftist artists and intellectuals an urgent appeal against the policy of the National Socialists and for communism. As amodern art ist, and especially as aJew , he faced persecution under Hitler's regime which took power in 1933. In that year, two of his pictures were displayed by theNazi s at theMannheim er Arts Center as examples ofdegenerate art , and Adler left Germany, staying inParis where he regarded hisexile consciously as political resistance against the fascist regime in Germany. In the years that followed, he made numerous journeys toPoland ,Italy ,Yugoslavia ,Czechoslovakia ,Romania and theSoviet Union . In 1937, twenty-five of his works were seized from public collections by the Nazis and four were shown in the "Entartete Kunst" (Degenerate Art) exhibition in Munich.With the outbreak of
World War II in 1939, he volunteered for thePolish army that had been reconstituted in France; in 1941 he was dismissed for health reasons and lived thereafter inKirkcudbright inScotland . In 1943 he moved toLondon , where he died onApril 25 ,1949 at the age of 53 years and with the bitter knowledge that none of his nine brothers and sisters had survived theHolocaust .Work
Adler was strongly influenced by Picasso and Léger. He enjoyed experimenting with materials, for example sand admixtures. He often painted Jewish subjects, and painted some few abstract compositions.
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