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Torn Modernism illuminates an important moment in the history of
the Kunstmuseum Basel's collection. In 1937 the Nazi cultural
policy denounced thousands of works as "degenerate" and forcibly
removed from German museums. The Third Reich's Ministry of
Propaganda correctly assumed that a portion of such works would
find buyers abroad, in this way certain artworks deemed
"internationally exploitable" reached the art market via various
channels. Georg Schmidt (1896-1966), the museum's director at the
time, managed in 1939 to acquire the Painting Animal Destinies by
Franz Marc (1880-1916) and twenty avant-garde masterpieces all at
once. In the catalogue, renowned experts trace the events based on
the seizures in German museums and explain the historical contexts.
The actors of the institutions and the art market are presented,
and the Nazi regime's act of cultural violence is revealed, which
resulted in an artificial fragmentation of Modernism into art that
was "exploitable" on the one hand, and art that had been destroyed
or forgotten on the other. Contributions on the auction of the
Galerie Fischer in Lucerne, on Georg Schmidt's approach, and on the
classification of the acquisitions in the context of Basel's
collection history bring specific Swiss aspects into focus.
In 1937, thousands of works by the Brucke artists were confiscated
from German museums by the National Socialist authorities, and
numerous icons of Expressionism were shown in the traveling
exhibition "Degenerate Art". The volume takes a critical look at
the fates and the artistic praxis of the former "Brucke" members in
the years after 1933. On the basis of numerous sources which have
hitherto not been analyzed, today's popular image of Expressionism,
its vilification as "degenerate" and the creation of the legend
after the end of the Second World War are examined: how much scope
for action was there and how should we evaluate the narratives of
"inner emigration" and the "zero hour" today? Based on the
extensive stocks of the Brucke-Museum, the publication discusses in
detail the everyday reality of the artists under the National
Socialists. The measures carried out against the former "Brucke"
Based on the extensive stocks of the Brucke-Museum, the publication
discusses in detail the everyday reality of the artists under the
National Socialists. The measures carried out against the former
"Brucke" members as a result of Nazi art policy are explained,
together with the direct effects on their creative work and the
self-image of the painters within the context of the times.
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