Felix Nussbaum (11 December 1904 – after 20 September 1944) was a German Jews surrealist Painting. Nussbaum's paintings, including Self Portrait with Jewish Identity Card (1943) and Triumph of Death (1944), explore his experiences as a Jew during the Holocaust. His work is usually associated with the New Objectivity movement, and was influenced by the works of Giorgio de Chirico, Henri Rousseau, and Vincent van Gogh. He took refuge in Belgium after the Nazi rise to power, but was deported to Auschwitz along with his wife Felka Platek only a few months before the British liberation of Brussels on 3 September 1944.
Nussbaum was a lifelong student, beginning his formal studies in 1920 in Hamburg and Berlin, and continuing as long as the tempestuous political situation allowed him. In his earlier works, Nussbaum was heavily influenced by Vincent van Gogh and Henri Rousseau, later taking influence from Giorgio de Chirico and Carlo Carrà as well. Nussbaum's careful approach to color may have been influenced by expressionist Karl Hofer.
In 1933, Nussbaum was studying under a scholarship in Rome at the Berlin Academy of the Arts when the seized control of Germany. When Adolf Hitler sent his Minister of Propaganda to Rome in April to disseminate Nazi artistic values, particularly the celebration of the Aryan race, Nussbaum realized that, as a Jew, he could not remain at the academy.
After Nazi Germany attacked Belgium in 1940, Nussbaum was arrested by Belgian police as a "hostile alien" German, and was subsequently taken to the Saint-Cyprien camp in Vichy France. The desperate circumstances in the camp influenced his work during this time. He eventually signed a request to the French camp authorities to be returned to Germany. On the train ride from Saint-Cyprien to Germany, he managed to escape and settled with Felka in occupied Belgium, and they began a life in hiding. Without residency papers, Nussbaum had no way of earning an income, but friends provided him with shelter and art supplies so that he could continue his craft. In 1943 he painted The Self Portrait with a Jewish identity card. In the painting there is a tree ("Nussbaum" translates to "nut tree" in English) whose branches are cut, with one branch bearing blossoms.
In 1955, Nussbaum was declared legally dead with 9 August 1944 selected as his date of death.
In 2014, researchers at the Russian state archives in Moscow identified a report from the Auschwitz infirmary dated 20 September 1944 that showed Nussbaum was treated for a blister on his left index finger. Nussbaum was not among the prisoners present on 27 January 1945 during the liberation of Auschwitz, and there are no known records of transfer to a separate concentration camp, leading researchers to conclude Nussbaum was murdered between 20 September 1944 and 27 January 1945.
He was featured alongside fellow concentration camp survivors and artists Jan Komski and Dinah Gottliebova in the 1999 documentary film Eyewitness, which was nominated for an Academy Award for Documentary Short Subject.
is a 1993 documentary directed by Barbara Pfeffer.
Major works
Triumph of Death
Selected paintings
Legacy
External links
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