
CCP Art Links
Check out the art links to start your practice in Creative Compassion for Peacebuilding
The Art Links section showcases artwork of persecuted artists and neglected artists, as well as those aligned with their artistic heritage
Feel free to choose your references to work with!
© Joods Cultureel Kwartier, Amsterdam
Artwork by Charlotte Salomon, a German artist from Berlin who fled to the south of France. She was murdered in Auschwitz at the age of 26
Artwork by Friedl Dicker Brandeis, an Austrian artist from Vienna. A Bauhaus teacher, designer, architect, and early art therapist, she pioneered Modernism. She was deported to the Theresienstadt concentration camp in 1942 and murdered in Auschwitz in 1944 at the age of 46
Artwork by Else Lasker-Schüler, a German poet and illustrator from Wuppertal, who emigrated to Switzerland in 1932, later to British-ruled Palestine in 1934 after having been physically harassed and threatened by the Nazis
Reference for the FREE CCP Ressources
© FOCUSZART Photo Shot from the Hölzel House, Stuttgart, GER
Artwork by Adolf Hölzel, a German artist from Olomouc in Northern Moravia. He was a professor at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Stuttgart who had a worldwide influence. He was also a musician and an early pioneer of modern art
Adol Hölzel was the first professor to accept women students in his art class, which was unheard of at the time. His former students named themselves the Hölzel Circle. The new art style they created was banned during the Nazi regime. Some of Hölzel's students went on to become renowned Bauhaus teachers and immigrated to the U.S. Three of his students, Käthe Loewenthal, Klara Neuburger, and Maria Lemmé were murdered under Nazi rule
Ida Kerkovius, a painter and tapestry weaver, was one of Hölzel's students. She studied at the Bauhaus and is considered one of the most important female representatives of classical modernism in Germany
Collections from the Center for Persecuted Arts, Solingen, Germany
Collections from the Arolsen Archives, The International Center On Nazi Persecution
Collections of contemporary Afghan persecuted artists: Ali Rahimi , Moshin Taasha. Published by Art At A Time Like This
Collection of contemporary Russian artists being blacklisted and silenced
More collections from around the world are coming soon!
