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Plate 21, Herbert Sandberg series, Der Weg: cafe crowded with arguing artists

Object | Accession Number: 1988.12.21

Aquatint, Bewegte Geister, created by Herbert Sandberg of a cafe full of artistic types, most paired off and arguing. It is from the series, Der Weg [The Way], a limited edition of 70 intaglio prints created from 1958-1965 for Buchenwald Museum for the 20th anniversary of liberation. Sandberg was imprisoned for 11 years by the Nazi regime, 7 under brutal conditions in Buchenwald concentration camp. Der Weg is a comprehensive autobiographical cycle, made to remind people of the day to day life destroyed by the Nazi dictatorship, as well as the horrors and immorality of the camps. The main sections are: prints 1-25, pre-1933 life; 26-60, resistance and persecution, including reconstructions of drawings Sandberg made while incarcerated; and 61-70, survivors postwar and the making of a new Germany. Sandberg, 26, was arrested in Berlin in 1934 for distributing anti-Nazi literature. He was convicted of treason and jailed. In 1938, he was transferred to the recently opened Buchenwald, as prisoner 3491, marked as both a Jewish and a political prisoner. In 1944, ill and in the infirmary, Sandberg created his first artworks as a prisoner. Buchenwald was liberated on June 12, 1945, by US troops. Sandberg returned to Berlin and resumed his career.

Artwork Title
Bewegte Geister
Alternate Title
Lively Minds
Series Title
Der Weg 70 Aquatinta-Radierungen
Date
creation:  1962
Geography
creation: Berlin (Germany : East)
Language
German
Classification
Art
Category
Prints
Credit Line
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection
 
Record last modified: 2022-07-28 18:11:44
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn521202