Blog
Holocaust Remembrance Day
November 01, 2024
Keinom, Celebrate People's History: White Rose, 2-color
offset printed poster, 2006, 2020.23.16.
Leonard Baskin, Man of Peace, woodcut, 1952, 2017.48.1.
Vera Klement, Lifeboat, oil on canvas, 1998, 2021.29.4.
Henk Krijger, Waiting for Charon Series: A Man Goin Around Takin
Names, giclée of photograph of original paper and foil collage on
board, 1973, 2021.64.20.
Marc Chagall, Nature Morte Brune (Brown Still Life), color
lithograph, 1957, 2013..68.10.
Auschwitz, also known as Auschwitz-Birkenau, was one of the most brutal concentration and extermination camps run by the Nazi regime. The camp complex had approximately 3 million prisoners during its years of operation from 1940-1945. Of the 1.3 million prisoners, at least 1.1 million of them perished through extreme mistreatment, malnourishment, or in the heinous gas chambers.
On January 27, 1945, Aushcwitz-Birkenau was liberated by the 60th Army of the First Ukrainian Front. In 2005, the United Nations General Assembly designated January 27 as International Holocaust Remembrance Day, dedicated to remembering those murdered by the Nazi regime and to educate and spread awareness about the Holocaust. This day is also devoted to rejecting ethnic or religious intolerance, and to education on other genocides, both historical and contemporary.
The GVSU Art Museum Collection holds works by artists, both Jewish and non-Jewish, who share their experiences of living through or fleeing from the Nazi regime. For many, creating artwork helped them process their own emotions related to the Holocaust, while simultaneously creating images dedicated to the mandate of never forgetting the atrocities of that time.
The GVSU Art Museum is dedicated to using art as a teaching resource for all stories. We believe that art has the power to move people; bridge gaps in understanding; spark our collective imagination toward building a better, more equitable world; and enrich learning experiences beyond the capacity of traditional classroom structures.
This year, the GVSU Art Museum is partnering with many organizations around Grand Rapids to provide resources for the third annual Henry Pestka Art and Poetry Contest. The program is designed for students in grade levels 6-12 who are completing Michigan state education requirements for Holocaust and Genocide Education, providing them the opportunity to process and reflect on the concepts they learned through writing or art. Visit the competition’s website to learn about the contest and to view the historical or artistic resources of our partner organizations. The following artists from the GVSU Art Museum Collection are now featured within these resources.
Vera Klement (1929-2023)
Vera Klement grew up in what is now Poland and experienced Nazi persecution as a young girl. Her family’s business was seized by the Gestapo and her home ransacked. She also witnessed Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, when the windows of Jewish businesses were shattered. On this night, her family’s temple was set on fire. After this, Klement’s family learned the Gestapo were searching for them. They fled to the United States, establishing themselves in New York. In Manhattan, Klement studied to become an artist and several of her works explore her lived experiences.
Explore more work in the collection by Vera Klement.
Leonard Baskin (1922-2000)
Leonard Baskin was a sculptor, wood-engraver, book-illustrator, graphic artist, writer, and teacher. Born in New Brunswick, NJ, Baskin’s father was an orthodox Jewish rabbi. By the age of 15, he began to study art formally, later attending a Jewish religious college. Much of his work was influenced by biblical stories, mythology, literature, and history. During World War II, Baskin served in the Navy and later returned to Europe to continue creating art.
Baskin created many works on the Holocaust, including the bronze statue Holocaust Memorial in Ann Arbor, MI. Baskin said it took him fifty years to be able to create work on the subject of the Holocaust. “The woodcuts make but a faint stab at the appalling actuality of the Holocaust, but they have granted me a gesture to somehow deal with the crashing reality of the Holocaust.”
Explore more work in the collection by Leonard Baskin.
Marc Chagall (1887-1985)
Marc Zakharovich Chagall, born Moishe Shagall, was a Jewish artist born in Russia, in what is now modern day Belarus. Chagall was one of the six Jewish artists to have his work included in the Nazi 1937 Degenerate Art exhibition. He and his wife Bella fled France after the Nazi occupation began and settled in New York City, NY. In 1945 when news of the Holocaust began to spread, Chagall felt compelled to respond to this tragedy through art. After the war, he returned to France, where he created artwork that promoted peace and healing, including the stained glass windows many people know him for.
Explore more work in the collection by Marc Chagall.
Henk Krijger (1914-1979)
Henk Krijger lived through World War II in Amsterdam, experienced Nazi occupation, and participated in the Dutch resistance. As a designer, typographer, and illustrator, Krijger worked for De Bizige Bij (The Busy Bee), an illegal publishing house that created and published Nazi resistance materials. The sales of these publications were used to raise funds for displaced Jewish children who were hidden from deportation to the concentration camps. Krijger also lived through the Hongervinter of 1944-45, where he smuggled potatoes into Amsterdam in direct defiance of the Nazi food embargo. After 1945, Krijger created a sculpture in the Netherlands celebrating the millionth home built after the destruction of the war.
The GVSU Art Museum holds the largest public collection of Krijger’s art.
Explore more work in the collection by Henk Krijger.