Swedish Artist Uses Jewish Holocaust Victims' Ashes for Painting

THE TELEGRAPH
By Matthew Day, Warsaw
Image of artist and ashes from Nazi death camp. Courtesy of Radio Sweden
POLAND---Carl Michael von Hausswolff mixed the ashes from the infamous Nazi facility with water to compose a small painting of grey streaks. The work now hangs in a gallery in the Swedish city of Lund. But Salomon Schulman, a leading voice in Sweden's Jewish community who lost many relatives to the Holocaust, has condemned the painting as "revolting". Mr Von Hausswolff took the ashes during a 1989 visit to Majdanek, which, during its 34 months in operation from 1941 to 1944, claimed around 79,000 lives, the vast majority of them Polish Jews. The artist said the ashes appeared to "contain the memories and the souls of people: people tormented and murdered by other people in the most viscous war of the 20th Century". Despite the scandal surrounding the painting, Martin Bryder, the owner of the Lund gallery, defended the decision to exhibit the work of art. [link]

Comments

Anonymous said…
Did he get the victim's familie's permision??? I don't think so-never checked with me...
An artist doesn't need permission to do what he feels is right. Neither do you. Just do it.
Anonymous said…
An Artist needs the permission. Killing in the name of art is not permitted. And it is not permitted to use the ash of the deads of the shoa to make paintings.
Dear Anonymous, your Commandment is not convincing, and the artist did not "kill" in the name of art. You do however have the power to choose whether you support this artist or not. I choose to support his freedom of expression.
I feel this artist expression "is" pushing boundaries, however isn't that all artists' missions. To use their talents to make us all think. This artist can't undo the past wrongs, however what is wrong with using the past to create something that may remind us and at the same time give create some beauty from these past wrongs.
I think you are so right. People who judge an artists right to create without their permission are missing the point of artistic freedom. No Prophet asked for permission and artists are Prophets.