Mann at War

Manx Museum Manx Museum, Douglas, Isle of Man, United Kingdom

The role that the Isle of Man and its people have played in conflict from the 18th Century to present day

Free

Marianne Grant Holocaust Artworks

Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum Argyle Street, Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom

Marianne Grant was a Jewish artist and Holocaust survivor from Prague who settled in Glasgow after the end of World War II. She uniquely recorded in drawings her experiences of imprisonment in the concentration camp-ghetto Theresienstadt, the Czech family camp in Auschwitz-Birkenau, German slave labour camps and Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp

Free

Internment – Living with the Wire

Manx Museum Manx Museum, Douglas, Isle of Man, United Kingdom

Discover more about ‘life behind the wire’ and the different ways that interned artists recorded the world around them

Free

Marie-Louise von Motesiczky

New Walk Museum and Art Gallery 53 New Walk, Leicester, Leicester, United Kingdom

Display of gifted artworks

The Art of Eugene Halliday and Käthe Schuftan

Tan-y-Garth Hall Retreat Pontfadog, Llangollen, North Wales, United Kingdom

Käthe Schuftan was a Jewish artist who escaped from Berlin in June 1939. Her work was linked with both Käthe Kollwitz and the Neue Sachlichkeit (New Objectivity) movement, including Otto Dix and George Grosz.

Selected dates from September to April

Free

The Bauhaus in Bristol

The Ken Stradling Collection 48 Park Row, Bristol, United Kingdom

The Ken Stradling Collection is very pleased to be taking part in the international celebrations marking the centenary of the Bauhaus.

Free

Art Aiding Politics: Hampstead in the 1930s and ’40s

Burgh House and Hampstead Museum Burgh House, New End Square, London, United Kingdom

Hampstead has been a place of refuge, reflection and community for centuries. This exhibition aims to show the response of some of its most creative residents to the tumultuous political events of the early twentieth century; from the Spanish Civil War to the rise of the Nazi party and the outbreak of the Second World War and beyond.

Free

Beyond Bauhaus – Modernism in Britain 1933–66

Architecture Gallery, RIBA 66 Portland Place, London, London, United Kingdom

This exhibition revisits the impact of three notable Bauhaus émigrés: Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer and László Moholy-Nagy. Centred on the brief period of 1934-37, when they came to live and work in Britain, it traces this fertile moment in British architectural history and considers where its legacy has had the most enduring impact.

Free

Migrations: Masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection

Museum of Gloucester Brunswick Road, Gloucester, United Kingdom

The exhibition shines a spotlight on a very different Europe 80 years ago in the lead up to, and the start of, WW2. It features the forced journeys of many of central Europe’s most distinguished and pioneering artists, who fled tyranny in search of artistic and personal freedoms.

Free

Marie-Louise von Motesiczky

Tate Britain Millbank, London, London, United Kingdom

This free display covers the life and work of Marie-Louise von Motesiczky alongside other émigrés who escaped Nazi Europe for the relative safety of Britain.

Free

Migration at the RNCM

Royal Northern College of Music 124 Oxford Road, Manchester, United Kingdom

Migration has been in the DNA of the RNCM from its earliest roots, when in 1893 the German-born conductor Sir Charles Hallé realised his vision of founding a Northern conservatoire which became the Royal Manchester College of Music.

Pioneers of Modernism: William Morris and the Bauhaus

Willam Morris Gallery Lloyd Park, Forest Road, London, Walthamstow, United Kingdom

The William Morris Gallery’s first major exhibition exploring the relationship between William Morris and the Bauhaus.

20:20 Stories of Moving Lineage

Brent Civic Centre Engineers Way, London, Wembley, United Kingdom

20:20 is a multimedia, touring arts and heritage project that casts a long lens over the personal memories of refugee families who arrived in the UK from 1999 onwards from Kosovo and other major global conflicts.

20:20 Stories of Moving Lineage

Willesden Library 95 High Road, London, Willesden, United Kingdom

20:20 is a multimedia, touring arts and heritage project that casts a long lens over the personal memories of refugee families who arrived in the UK from 1999 onwards from Kosovo and other major global conflicts.

Heartfield: One Man’s War

Four Corners Gallery 121 Roman Road, London, United Kingdom

An exhibition of prints by the renowned photomontage artist John Heartfield. A pioneer of German agitprop and an early member of the Berlin Dada group, Heartfield is known as the inventor of political photomontage. 33 of Heartfield’s scathingly satirical artworks against war, fascism and the Third Reich will be on display.

Josef Herman

Flowers Gallery 82 Kingsland Road, London, United Kingdom

The first major exhibition for many years to trace the complex life journey of Polish-Jewish artist Josef Herman (1911-2000), from his escape from Nazi-occupied Europe in 1940 through his time spent in Glasgow, South Wales, London and Suffolk.