A conversation with Jas Elsner on the art of his father, Dante Elsner
Camden Image Gallery 174 Royal College Street, LondonA conversation with Jas Elsner on the art of his father, Dante Elsner
A conversation with Jas Elsner on the art of his father, Dante Elsner
Poet, Maia Elsner, will be reading past work and new pieces inspired by the art of her grandfather, the late Dante Elsner (1920-1997)
Ceremony to lay a Stolperstein for Dutch-Jewish paintings conservator Ada (Anna) van Dantzig
Charlotte Salomon (1917-1943):
A Life Before Auschwitz
Lecture by Monica Bohm-Duchen
The second in a series of summer research seminars on The Arts of Postwar Britain 1945–1965 with Sheridan Palmer and Jane Eckett
Tribute to Hungarian-born stained glass artist Ervin Bossányi, best known for the windows he created for Canterbury Cathedral.
A talk about The Untold Story of the Interned Jewish Intellectuals Who Turned an Island Prison into the Most Remarkable School in the World
A talk by Dorothea Schöne about Jussuf, Abbo, a fascinating but still too little-known émigré artist, who died in London in 1953.
Holocaust researcher and educator Mike Levy talking about his recent book, Get the Children Out! Unsung Heroes of the Kindertransport
Art historian and Insiders/Outsiders founding director Monica Bohm-Duchen gives a tour of the Barbican Centre’s fascinating exhibition, Postwar Modern: New Art in Britain, 1945-1965.
Composer Marilyn Herman introduces a video-recorded recital of two brand new works relating to her family’s tragic wartime history
The film-makers will be present to participate in a Q&A after each screening, and the evening will conclude with a panel discussion
In this walking tour we'll discover the revolutionary Modernist homes and idealistic architecture built in Hampstead in the 1930s onwards
Playwright and author Fanny Mills will speak about the hidden story of her family which had always shadowed her life.
Get to know the émigrés who, having fled Nazi Europe, embraced the future and introduced avant-garde European and British artists to the public and press.
This seminar focuses on the analysis of Erna Pinner's graphic and literary work, with particular emphasis on how the ideological discourse that influenced her work during the interwar period is transferred to her artistic production during her years of exile in London.
Featuring moving first-hand testimony, and drawn from letters, diaries and present-day interviews, The School That Escaped the Nazis is a dramatic human tale that offers a unique child’s-eye perspective on Nazi persecution and the Holocaust.
In the first half of the 20th century Hampstead was home to some of the era's most pioneering artists. We will walk in their footsteps.