- Видео 130
- Просмотров 50 553
Insiders Outsiders
Великобритания
Добавлен 12 ноя 2018
Nationwide arts festival celebrating refugees from Nazi Europe and their contribution to British culture
March 2020 marked the official end of the festival, but also the beginning of a longer-term commitment to celebrating the impact of this remarkable generation of émigrés under the Insiders/Outsiders umbrella, in the form of an ongoing programme of online events on topics broadly related to the theme of the original festival.
Charlotte Mayer (1929-2022) – The Spiral of Life
This talk, given by the sculptor’s daughter, Antonia Salmon who is also an artist, will explore Charlotte Mayer’s early years growing up in Prague and the impact on her life of her experience of being a child refugee when she came to the UK in 1939 at the age of ten. Antonia will also discuss the influence on her mother’s approach to life of her creative and dynamic grandmother. Charlotte’s deep interest in and practice of meditation, combined with her studies of nature, led her to produce abstract forms that have dynamism and stillness in their apparent simplicity. Many of her sculptures were a healing response to life challenges. She will explore Charlotte’s working methods and material...
Просмотров: 302
Видео
Arthur Fleischmann (1896-1990): A New Life in the UK
Просмотров 2919 часов назад
he sculptor Arthur Fleischmann was born into a Jewish family in Bratislava. He studied medicine in Budapest and Prague and qualified as a medical doctor - where in parallel he started his sculpture studies under Professor Jan Štursa. Immediately after qualifying as a doctor, he turned his attention and energy fully to sculpture. He left Europe in the mid-1930s and, following periods living and ...
Insight and Observation: The Life and Work of Gerda Rubinstein (1931-2022)
Просмотров 57Месяц назад
Gerda Rubinstein was born in Berlin in 1931 to a Christian mother and a Jewish father. The family moved to Amsterdam in 1933, but her father was taken by the Nazi regime and later died in Monowitz. Gerda first worked in a pottery and then in the studio of Wessel Couzijn. She attended the Rijks Academie, gaining a grant which enabled her to study in Paris under Ossip Zadkine. Returning to Amster...
Karen Gershon (1923-1993) - Writing my mother’s story: a journey of redefinition
Просмотров 272 месяца назад
The author and poet Karen Gershon, probably best known for her book We Came as Children (1966), arrived in England as the child Kate Loewenthal on a Kindertransport in December 1938. For her daughter Naomi Shmuel, writing her story has been a harrowing journey of redefinition as she uncovered stark truths in letters written to her sister over a lifetime. The unfolding story includes both the na...
Connecting the Dots: Reconstructing the Uncharted Life of Jella Lepman in Wartime Britain, 1937-1945
Просмотров 1613 месяца назад
A rare Jewish émigré to return to Germany immediately after WWII, Jella Lepman (1891-1970) spearheaded an effort to re-educate the children of Germany, and the world, so they would become less susceptible to the pull of ultra-nationalism and xenophobia that led to the horrors of two world wars. While Allied occupations sought to de-Nazify Germany-efforts which were quickly dismantled after the ...
The Laterndl: A Light in Dark Times
Просмотров 683 месяца назад
Das Laterndl (The Little Lantern) was the first and largest of a number of German-language theatres run by exiles in London during the Second World War. It reunited friends and colleagues who had worked together in Vienna at one or other of the political cabaret theatres which had flourished during the period of Austro-fascism, 1934-1938. The three actors who proposed the opening of a theatre a...
Dirt on Flat Surfaces: René Halkett 1900-1983
Просмотров 1284 месяца назад
Artist René Halkett wasn’t what he seemed. In 1936 he escaped to Britain with his fourth wife Hilde, and he wanted to be reborn. A master of many languages, he could conjugate ‘Renaître’. But his Weimar birthright named him Albrecht Georg Friedrich Freiherr Von Fritsch. Born to be a baron, all he ever wanted was to paint. René featured in 2023’s ‘Refugees at Dartington’ online conference. But t...
Painting Trauma: The Story of Heinz Inlander (1925-83)
Просмотров 1424 месяца назад
Fragments of experience can be brought together by colour and shape, form and canvas, but also by craft and an intense awareness of painting as one of the foundations upon which humans build their understanding of the cultures and environments they inhabit. For Austrian-born Henry (born Heinz) Inlander, who settled in England in 1938, paintings of landscapes brought the richness of the physical...
Becoming Kathrine Talbot: A Jewish Refugee and the Novelist She Invented
Просмотров 818 месяцев назад
In 1935, when she was fourteen years old, Ilse Gross fled Germany for the safety of England. Alone. Seventeen years later, she published her audacious first novel Fire in the Sun. Her pen name: Kathrine Talbot. Her German Jewish identity she carefully concealed. Becoming Kathrine Talbot: A Jewish Refugee and the Novelist She Invented, first published in German in 2022, recreates the life of a r...
Crossed Wires, Broken Lines: Ernst Schoen and Charlotte Wolff
Просмотров 1288 месяцев назад
Professor Esther Leslie and Dr Sam Dolbear, co-authors of the 2023 book Dissonant Waves: Ernst Schoen and Experimental Sound in the Twentieth Century, will first talk about the life of Ernst Schoen (1894-1960)-poet, composer, radio programmer, theorist, and best friend of Walter Benjamin from childhood-as he moves between Frankfurt, Berlin, Paris, and London. Through friendship and comradeship,...
Otti Berger: Weaving for Modernist Architecture
Просмотров 3969 месяцев назад
Otti Berger (1898-1944) was a hugely talented Jewish textile designer, born in present-day Croatia, who both studied and taught at the Bauhaus in Dessau, Germany. She found temporary refuge in the UK in 1937-8 but failed to thrive here, and ultimately perished in Auschwitz. Berger created fabrics that fundamentally changed the understanding of what textiles could be and do. A core member of the...
Memorials, Past and Present (Part II): Caren Garfen in conversation with Monica Bohm-Duchen
Просмотров 639 месяцев назад
As a follow-up to the session held on 8 April, we invited Second Generation US-based artists Robin L.Bernstein and Mirka Knaster to join Caren in conversation about their shared preoccupations -above all, the nature of Holocaust memorialisation in the 21st century and the role that mixed-media art forms can play in this.
Mid European Art Exhibition
Просмотров 989 месяцев назад
Andrea Lehmann, senior researcher and associate director of restitution at Christie’s, Brussels, will talk about her ongoing researches into the tactfully named Mid-European Art Exhibition held at Leicester Museum and Art Gallery in 1944 - 80 years ago this year. In fact, this was an extraordinary project with a remarkable history, an exhibition of world-class avant-garde German art condemned b...
Memorials, Past and Present (Part I): Caren Garfen in conversation with Monica Bohm-Duchen
Просмотров 32810 месяцев назад
London-based Caren Garfen is an award-winning artist specialising in textiles and meticulous hand stitching underpinned by extensive research. When these facets are combined, the artworks transcend their materiality, transforming them into powerful dialogues that explore and reflect upon the pressing issues that resonate within our society. Since 2019, Caren has been delving into themes concern...
Innocence and Experience Childhood and the Refugees from Nazism in Britain
Просмотров 4710 месяцев назад
On Tuesday 5 March 2024, NYU London at 6, Bedford Square WC1B 3RA hosted an hybrid event to celebrate the publication by Peter Lang of Innocence and Experience: Childhood and the Refugees from Nazism in Britain, an anthology of essays based on the papers presented at an online symposium organised by Insiders/Outsiders in partnership with the Research Centre for German and Austrian Exile Studies...
Esther Simpson: The True Story of her Mission to Save Scholars from Hitler’s Persecution
Просмотров 7010 месяцев назад
Esther Simpson: The True Story of her Mission to Save Scholars from Hitler’s Persecution
Peter László Péri (1889-1967) - Péri’s People
Просмотров 14210 месяцев назад
Peter László Péri (1889-1967) - Péri’s People
The Lives of Edith Hoffmann, Art Historian
Просмотров 6911 месяцев назад
The Lives of Edith Hoffmann, Art Historian
From Berlin to London: The Industrial Photography of Walter & Rita Nurnberg
Просмотров 8511 месяцев назад
From Berlin to London: The Industrial Photography of Walter & Rita Nurnberg
Lubetkin and Goldfinger: Misunderstood Visionaries?
Просмотров 136Год назад
Lubetkin and Goldfinger: Misunderstood Visionaries?
Creative Sanctuary: Refugees at Dartington in the 1930s and beyond. Day Two
Просмотров 178Год назад
Creative Sanctuary: Refugees at Dartington in the 1930s and beyond. Day Two
Nobert Meyn: Post-war music at Dartington: the importance of the Summer School of Music
Просмотров 72Год назад
Nobert Meyn: Post-war music at Dartington: the importance of the Summer School of Music
Creative Sanctuary: Refugees at Dartington in the 1930s and beyond: Day One
Просмотров 301Год назад
Creative Sanctuary: Refugees at Dartington in the 1930s and beyond: Day One
The Maverick: George Weidenfeld and the Golden Age of Publishing
Просмотров 101Год назад
The Maverick: George Weidenfeld and the Golden Age of Publishing
My Disappearing Uncle: Europe, War and the Stories of a Scattered Family
Просмотров 127Год назад
My Disappearing Uncle: Europe, War and the Stories of a Scattered Family
Iris Murdoch and Harry Weinberger: Imaginations and Images
Просмотров 139Год назад
Iris Murdoch and Harry Weinberger: Imaginations and Images
Wonderful account of a sculptor's life, beautifully articulated.
🏛 Trent Park was a pioneering but essential POW experiment. Everywhere was 'bugged' the lampshades, fireplaces, even the trees outside, so when they went to sit down on a bench or go for a walk, they could be heard...👂🏼 Thank you for sharing, Gus 🙏🕯🪽
It’s funny….this afternoon, I found myself thinking of Peter, not having recalled visiting this site previously, and yet here I am, watching his story, seeing his face, only to discover I’d already been here. He truly was a most memorable man; kind, funny, warm, generous. He treated me as his equal and friend, despite our age difference. I think it was because I was from Detroit and loved Motown-how he loved that music. When I was struggling with a final project, he made a suggestion to pursue a local street artist and film him working. In many ways, that changed my life. How many people can say they had a friend who made that kind of impact? I called him one time after I’d found work on a film that I was proud to share with him. I can still hear his surprised voice on the line-those were days when long distance was costly. I didn’t care; I wanted him to be proud of me. I feel so fortunate to this day to have met this beautiful man. May his memory be for a blessing.
Regardless of any historical merit in the presentation, this academic is attempting to synthesize her career by destroying the reputation of dead celebrities. The cancel culture grift in all its disgusting rot.
It’s amazing and very sad story about Otti . Thank you so much for this lecture and a huge thank you to Judith for fabulous book about such fantastic weaver Otti Berger. I’m a weaver and I’m happy to know such an inspiring person .
Thank you for posting a lovely tribute to Mr Allenby. I believe my father was a student of his, and held him in very high regard.
"It's Alright Ma, ( I'm Only Bleeding ), the song by Bob Dylan, begins "Darkness at the break of noon, shadows even the silver spoon, the handmade blade, the child's balloon, eclipses both the sun and moon, to understand you know too soon there is no sense in trying." There might be a reference to the Fritz Lang movie M as well as to the Koestler book. Great discussion, guys. Other fine political novels are The Case for Comrade Tulyaev by Victor Serge, The Gulag Archipelago books by Solzhenisyn, the previously mentioned The Captive Mind by Czeslaw Milosz, In Dubious Battle by Steinbeck, Homage To Catalonia by Orwell, The Foundation Pit by Platonov, and the book by Zinoviev, The Yawning Heights. If you look at JR by William Gaddis as a satire of capitalism, that's a pretty hilarious and inspired novel that shakes the republic to its roots. Finally, The God's are Athirst by Anatole France, and Les Miserables by Hugo are two other fine novels that can be thrown into the bonfire here.
Beyond words moving and inspiring 🙏
Was Hallas and Batchelor based in Soho Square, London?
Yes, at 10a Soho Square.
Have watched this with an open mind but as a student of Laban I cannot agree at all and dont understand your hostility to Laban. He was a genius and believed in dance for all not only dancing professionals. So many people have enjoyed dance both dancing and watching Labans work. If you are a dancer you cannot believe this is a racist style of dancing or that he himself was a nazi or a racist. This is utter nonsense.
Thank you so very much! It is amazingly interesting ❤
Fascinating , looking forward to my first visit to Leicester Art Gallery in Sept and sorry i missed the recent trip
This is very interesting and informative
The Huguenots were Muslim Moors and Sephardic Jews who upon The persecution by the Roman Catholic Empire of Spain migrated into western Europe France Holland and England. Those in France converted to Huguenots a confederation. They also the Puritans Quakers protestent and other religious groups at the time fighting the Catholics Empire
01:38 Nice one, keep it up!
For a follow up, I was wrong, the Sports Team Name is actually Argonauts! Oh well, I learned more about history. Thank you very much for sharing and God bless.
Very interesting. Knew nothing about the word until today. Heard it mentioned in a bible study and had me curious since it sounded like the name of a Sports Team of the University close to where we live.
Just make sure to remember here there has to be all french and all happens in france nowhere else ffs
😂 and friends, this is how history is made up, with lies, distorted realities and manipulations. Your tale narrative of museum is horrible and shameful! Hugenots are christians or catholics that were unhappy of the way the catolic church was rules, it does not belong to any nationalist narrative! FRANCE WAS CREATED IN 1784, hugenots were europeans of all backgrounds, of course you can’t have any neurone left to realise how big was france back in the day right? Why the useless wars in 16 century? To take over the catalan empire, descendant of the carolingians& roman empire! Why the french allied with the ottomans? Because france was the area of PARIS ONLY! So where were the french if france was so little? Liars!
The first ever migrants, check the naturalization chart and adoption& embracing process of the catalan nobles and their Compamies with their mariners , Cabot, Hawkins( Quinós) Burès, Rossell,along with the mercers and drapers , basic industries to develop ships to sail to the atlantic. Catalans founded and built what later was called the portuguese, british, french and spanish empires. We are the descendants of the carolingians& roman empire.
I came across Otti Berger for the first time a few hours before listening to this presentation, having read an article in the Guardian newspaper about her fate and an exhibition that brings to light those Bauhauslers who were not on the side of the angels. I agree that there should be an emphasis on her work rather than the circumstances of her death, what were all her efforts for if all anyone remembers about her is the way she died? I think the efforts that Judith Raum and her colleague went to in order to discover and recreate her textiles are extraordinary and moving. The book is, I am sure, the memorial she would have wished for. I am amazed that any archive material has survived war and ignorance, the evidence of these designers in our world is sometimes so fleeting and easily lost. I discovered around two years ago that Marcel Breuer was asked to work on designs for a house in my area, a west London suburb in the UK (he may even have made a site visit), by a refugee who was keen to employ Modernist designers who were then in London, the only clue a letter in Breuer's archive. Breuer was keen to move on to the US, but we can only imagine what might have been and wonder if Otti's curtains and carpets might have been used. Thank you so much for this.
I'm trying to find out more on my Pierre Cresson family . He was a gardener for the Prince of Orange, born at the Creeson Manor in France. Fled here in the later 1600s as a Huguenot.
Thank you for a fascinating presentation on a fabulous and terribly under-rated artist. I received the book in the post last week, I am now finding time to go through it and read it. Hoping also to make it to the Bauhaus Arkiv for the exhibition. Greetings from Slovakia.
Admin really should have turned off everyone’s access to mics before recording to avoid the distraction of seeing people eating their supper etc.
Caren, Thank you for this wonderful conversation and your thoughtful and remarkable response to this often terrible and scary world. Your voice is powerful, evocative and important. I am so glad this was recorded and shared with those of us who were unable to attend.
Thank you so much ! This interview discussion has meant a great deal to me, and I am so impressed with your courage, insight, and intelligent patience that you bring to your work. You speak quietly, but carry a big stick…. One of the things I love about your work is that it requires the person encountering it to actually think. So thank you for posting this and making it available for me to hear and be part of… Bravo to all involved 🙌
Thank you so much for your kind words
My French Huguenot ancestors fled Orleans to Strasbourg then to Pennsylvania ❤
Hugenots are not french, despite modern day narrative. And i bet your ancestors did not speak french, occitan breton or any other native language because french like spanish are invasive languages,
🦧🦧🦧
Im not suppossed to know😂😂😂
Looking forward to the release of the book: _Otti Berger: Weaving for Modernist Architecture_ this March. Loved the talk. Thanks to all!
I am trying to find out more information about the Huguenot food culture, restaurants etc in the EC3 London area in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries.
Janet, I posted too soon. I have now watched your wonderful video. The utter tragic heartbreak about your family and the miracle that Siberia turned out to be. You got to freedom which was another miracle. I used to do some pottery but nothing like the scale that you do but I do paint. Your discussion of your work was inspiratonal . Thank you.
Good afternoon Janet. It was a pleasure to meet you the other day and hear the amazing story of your life, especially in Siberia as a child. I look forward to exploring more of this website and seeing your art. All best wishes.
What a wonderfully interesting program and beautifully presented. Extremely interesting. Thank you it has awakened my interest.
A beautiful Tribute to Rosalind.
There was a very important silk weaving community in Boston, Massachusetts. Benjamin Franklin was involved in developing the silk weaving industry in colonial America. My family, the Hemenways, were silk merchants for many generations. I remember my grandmother taking silk stockings and making yarn out of them and then weaving it into beautiufl tapestries.
Thanks for Uploading.
In the years since the end of WW2, I have sadly come to terms with what the USA really is: a platform for the global hegemony of an uncrupulous, immoral, oligarchy. As such, the world is, in my view, far better off to have thwarted the sole nuclear power of the USA. I think that Fuchs realized what the USA is and tried to advance the world towards multipolarity, which is now being achieved, though after millions of innocent people have been killed by my country's imperial wars and meddling.
This is just lovely!
I had an assignment on the red egg artifact, and this talk helped me a lot to understand the piece. Thank you for the informative and interesting talk.
Good but still need to find that folder.
thank you for this rare discussion...been a long admirer of Mendelssohn works....greeting from Indonesia
Promo*SM 😒
Are they related to Otto Wels?
They are not related to Otto Wels the politician, but Otto Wels, the Czechoslovak aircraft constructor, was Rudolf Wels's brother.
Thankyou Lisa, Monica and Anna. Thankyou for this talk l learnt much about Bernat Klein. Looking to viewing more of your videos. Pauline.
I just finished reading « Invisible Walls » and I would like to thank Hella Pick for sharing her memories and experiences with us. She is a model of commitment for Peacebuilding in #Comm4Peace 🕊️
I would like to have my Hugenot ancestry traced. How do I contact Dr. Winch?
Well done discussion . [I am a Mendelssohn aficionado, and just happened to find this program on RUclips channel. Many thanks...! Alex Grimmson/ Missoula, Montana/ USA
𝖕𝖗𝖔𝖒𝖔𝖘𝖒
Want to get a copy of "darkness at noon "..havnt read it for forty years Seems relevant to whats coming