Book Launch, Hans Keller 1919-1985: A musician in dialogue with his times

Guildhall School of Music and Drama Silk Street, London, City of London

Alison Garnham and Susi Woodhouse present their new centenary biography of Hans Keller, in an evening of music and readings. On Hans Keller’s birthday itself, the Belcea Quartet perform Haydn’s Op.76 No.2 and Britten’s Third Quartet (which Britten dedicated to Keller).

Free

René Halkett – from Bauhaus to Cornwall

Falmouth Art Gallery Municipal Buildings, The Moor, Falmouth, Cornwall

On the 100th anniversary of the formation of the Bauhaus, this exhibition showcases the work of one of its students, René Halkett (1900-1983), who studied under the renowned artists Klee and Kandinsky.

Free

Words: Insiders / Outsiders

Kings Place 90 York Way, London

Words: Jewish Book Week. Anna Nyburg, Daniel Snowman and Monica Bohm-Duchen. Insiders/Outsiders examines the extraordinarily rich contribution of refugees from Nazi-dominated Europe to the visual culture, art education and art-world structures of the United Kingdom.

£9.50

Isokon and the Bauhaus in Britain: Exhibition

The Aram Gallery 110 Drury Lane, Covent Garden, London

During the mid-1930s and 1940s the Isokon flats and bar became a hub for creatives, including Bauhaus professors Walter Gropius, Marcel Breuer and László Moholy-Nagy. The three produced furniture, architecture and graphic art for Jack Pritchard’s Isokon design company.

Recollections of Hans Keller

Wigmore Hall 36 Wigmore Street, London

Study day and concert celebrating Hans Keller’s centenary, featuring discussion with musicians who knew Keller, a music workshop, film showing and concert by the Elias Quartet.

Haunted by History

Birkbeck Cinema 43 Gordon Square, London

A selection of recent essay films – poignant, thought-provoking, sometimes darkly humorous and frequently disturbing – made by UK-based members of the so-called ‘Second Generation’, namely, the children of refugees from Nazi Europe and/or Holocaust survivors, whose work explores the complex and necessarily problematic legacy of their families’ experiences.

A Celebration of Hans Keller

The Menuhin Hall Cobham Road, Stoke d'Abernon, Surrey

A celebration of Hans Keller by the Yehudi Menuhin School, where Keller taught chamber music in the 1980s.
On Hans Keller’s birthday itself, the Belcea Quartet perform Haydn’s Op.76 No.2 and Britten’s Third Quartet (which Britten dedicated to Keller).

Hans Keller Centenary – Belcea Quartet

Wigmore Hall 36 Wigmore Street, London

On Hans Keller’s birthday itself, the Belcea Quartet perform Haydn’s Op.76 No.2 and Britten’s Third Quartet (which Britten dedicated to Keller).

£14 – £16

Isokon and the Bauhaus in Britain: Talk with authors Leyla Daybelge and Magnus Englund

Daunt Books 51 South End Road, London

The hugely influential Lawn Road Flats, or Isokon building, was commissioned by visionary couple Jack and Molly Pritchard and designed by architect Wells Coates. Isokon and the Bauhaus in Britain (Batsford) by Leyla Daybelge and Magnus Englund tells the extraordinary story of Isokon, and how its network of residents helped shape modern Britain.

£5

Four Parts of a Folding Screen

Birkbeck Cinema 43 Gordon Square, London

Based on documents found in Berlin archives, Four Parts of a Folding Screen explores exclusion, statelessness and the legalised theft and sale of everyday family possessions by the National Socialist regime.

Hans Keller Centenary Celebration

Clare Hall Herschel Road, Cambridge, Cambridge

Cambridge University Library (home of the Hans Keller Archive), the Faculty of Music and Clare Hall combine in a day of talks, discussion and music celebrating Hans Keller’s Centenary.

The art market under the Occupation 1940-1944

Mémorial de la Shoah 17, rue Geoffroy l’Asnier, Paris

In the summer of 1941, the French government began confiscating businesses, real estate, financial assets and art works from Jews across the country. Victims of both Nazi and Vichy laws, French Jews were stripped of their property and excluded from every sphere of political, social and economic life – a prelude to their physical elimination. Meanwhile, during the Occupation of 1940-1944, France’s art market thrived.

Talk: ‘Albert Reuss in Mousehole, The Artist As Refugee’

Royal Cornwall Museum River Street, Truro, Cornwall

Albert Reuss (1889-1975) was a Jewish émigré artist. Born in Vienna, he fled to England in 1938 to escape Nazi persecution, losing family, possessions and his reputation as an artist. In 1948, he moved to Mousehole, Cornwall, where he continued to work as an artist, but his style changed dramatically, reflecting the trauma he had suffered.

£4 – £7

“Child Migrants Welcome?”

Migration Museum at The Workshop 26 Lambeth High Street, London

Come to the screening of a series of short films about the welcome and non-welcome experienced by young people who have migrated to the UK – from Syrian children on the Isle of Bute in Scotland, to Iraqi Kurdish youth in Norwich, to Eritreans in Harrow and Polish children in Sidmouth.

£5 – £8.97

Marie-Louise von Motesiczky

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

Display of gifted artworks