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Artist Profile: Vera Klement
December 10, 2024
Vera Klementovna Schapiro (Vera Klement, 1929-2023) was born in the Free City of Danzig, a city-state in Germany (now Gdansk, Poland) in 1929. Klement grew up in Zoppot (now Sopot, Poland), and deeply loved her hometown. In 1933, the Nazi Party won the political majority in the region Klement lived in. In 1938, the Nazis seized the Schapiro’s lumberyard, forcing Klement’s father to flee the city. The Gestapo then broke into their home, prompting Klement and family to flee to a cousin’s home and apply for exit visas.
The experience was extremely traumatic for young Klement, who was then around nine years old. Klement wrote about her experience in her memoir: “We heard screaming from the street below ... flames and smoke surged from the synagogue across the street, heating the windows of our cousins’ apartment. We stood back, in fear of being seen from below as our pink temple burned.”
The Schapiro’s later reunited with Klement’s father before boarding an ocean liner for Manhattan in the United States. By 1938, Klement and her family had settled into their new life in America. At the age of eleven, her father gave her a set of watercolors and began to teach her to paint. She attended a high school dedicated to the arts and, after graduating, earned a two-year certificate from the School of Art at The Cooper Union. Abstract Expressionism, considered to be the first truly American art movement, was exploding just as she graduated with her certificate. Aspects of this movement, such as Action Painting - a style of painting where paint is splashed, dripped, and smeared across the canvas, allowing randomness to become a part of the artwork - were incorporated in Klement’s lifelong practice. Klement later moved to Chicago, IL with her then husband and young son, and eventually began to teach at the University of Chicago, where she worked until her retirement.
Klement’s artwork is usually large and often involves two canvases or
sheets of paper. The subjects might not seem related, but to Klement
they are. The subjects she paints often come out of a field of white,
suggesting isolation. Her themes often explore loneliness or
persecution, the Holocaust, the massacres of the indigenous peoples of
North America, and an individual’s exile. Klement was also inspired by
music and literature, including works by other Jewish artists and
their responses to the Holocaust. After being forced to flee Nazi
persecution at a young age, growing up with the knowledge of what
happened during the Holocaust, Klement explored the ideas of identity
and loss for the rest of her life.
Explore more work by Vera Klement in the collection.
Explore a past GVSU Art Museum exhibition about Vera Klement.
Vera Klement, The East was Red with Cockrow, oil on canvas,
1999, 2012.98.1.
Vera Klement, Blossoming, oil on canvas, 2018, 2021.29.7.
Vera Klement, Greening, oil on canvas, 2014, 2021.29.1.