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Alina Szapocznikow: Confronting the Shoah through sculpture

Leading art historian Griselda Pollock hails the work of a neglected artist who survived Auschwitz

January 10, 2018 13:05
A Troubled Age (1956) on display at the Hepworth Gallery
7 min read

What happens when art confronts horror? Can art testify to suffering without betraying it? Is art sometimes undone by the surfacing of traumatic memory? How do we, the viewers of art, respond to artworks that tell us of the unbearable experiences that artists who survived the Shoah have witnessed?

            For many years, as an art historian, I have been pondering these ethical questions by investigating how art can transform traumatic pasts in the work of largely Jewish artists of the twentieth century who are women — Charlotte Salomon,Vera Frenkel, Chantal Akerman, Hannah Wilke, Bracha Ettinger and Eva Hesse. One of these artists is the Polish-born Jewish sculptor named Alina Szapocznikow (1926-73) (pronounced: Shah-potch-nikoff), whose amazing sculptures are now on view at The Hepworth in Wakefield until January 28. It has taken several decades for this brilliant artist, whose life was tragically cut short at the age of 46 by cancer, to return to the level of public renown she enjoyed during her lifetime, both in Poland and France, where she had lived during the last decade of her life. Now frequently exhibited alongside Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, Hannah Wilke and other well-known contemporaries, her work has never been exhibited in Britain before.

            Alina Szapocznikow was born into a medical family in the Polish town of Kalisz in 1926. Her father died in 1938 from tuberculosis. In 1939, following the conquest of Poland by Nazi Germany, the thirteen-year-old Alina, her mother and brother were forced into the ghetto of Pabianice and then the infamous Lodz ghetto. Transported thence to Auschwitz, but soon moved to Bergen-Belsen  (as was Anne Frank and her mother and sister) where she worked alongside her doctor mother, Alina Szapocznikow was finally liberated alone from the ghetto-camp of Terezin in the Czech Republic in 1945 where her brother died earlier. She believed she was the sole survivor of her family.  Thus, like the writer Janina Bauman, whose powerful memoir Winter in the Morning (published in 1986 and reprinted in 2006 as Beyond These Walls: Escaping the Warsaw Ghetto) makes us share her adolescence in Warsaw ghetto and then in hiding, Szapocznikow’s formative years were passed in some of the most terrifying and unspeakable places on earth.

            Defiantly deciding to identify as Czech rather than return to Poland when she was liberated, Szapocznikow moved to Prague to study sculpture before moving to Paris to continue her artistic training where she encountered the modernist art of Jean Arp, Alberto Giacometti and Ossip Zadkine. Forced by the French to return to Poland, and having refound her mother from whom she had been separated in 1944, the artist worked under the new Communist regime in Poland that at least supported artists providing them with studios and resources, commissions and travel grants. She took part in the competition for the memorial at Auschwitz, then considered by the Polish state a memorial site for its own national suffering.