Holocaust Wall Hangings
The Holocaust Wall Hangings by Judith Weinshall Liberman are a series of sixty loose-hanging fabric banners of varying sizes created between 1988 and 2002. They illustrate the plight of the Jewish people and other minorities during the Holocaust of World War II.
Background
Judith Weinshall Liberman was born in 1929 and grew up in Haifa, Mandatory Palestine during the years of the Holocaust. In 1947, she moved to America to attend college and received four American university degrees including a J.D. degree from the University of Chicago Law School and an LL.M. degree from the University of Michigan Law School. In 1956, she turned her attention to the arts and began studying drawing, painting, sculpture, and other art mediums at the Art Institute of Boston, the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, the DeCordova Museum School, the Boston University College of Fine Arts and the Massachusetts College of Art and Design.In 1988, after spending a year painting more than two dozen works about the Holocaust on stretched canvas, Weinshall Liberman began using loose-hanging fabric as the background for her art. In her 2002 book, Holocaust Wall Hangings, Weinshall Liberman reveals that the decision to place Holocaust-themed imagery on loose-hanging fabric was inspired by her childhood memories of propaganda banners and flags of the Third Reich that were typically hung on podiums, balconies, and walls at National Socialist German Workers' Party rallies and ceremonies. Because these banners and their insignia promoted Nazi ideology and genocide, Weinshall Liberman found it fitting to use similar hanging fabrics in her art tribute to those who suffered during the Holocaust.
The Holocaust Wall Hangings are grouped into three categories: Scenes of the Holocaust, which focus on people portrayed as totally isolated or depicted as part of a depersonalized mass; Maps of the Holocaust which document the Holocaust with places, numbers. and other symbols of destruction, and a third group, the Epilogue wall hangings, which mostly explore God's relationship to the Holocaust.
Materials
To convey her feelings about the Holocaust, Weinshall Liberman chose fabrics ranging in height from and in length from. She used a color palette of mostly red, gray and black – red: blood and fire; gray: suffering and despair; black: death – and besides the primary use of painting and block printing, Weinshall Liberman utilized various combinations of stenciling, sewing, appliqué, embroidery, beading, and image transfer.Exhibitions
The Holocaust Wall Hangings have been displayed in exhibitions in the United States, Israel, and Hungary and have been featured in numerous museums and other public institutions including Yad Vashem in Jerusalem, Israel; Mishkan Museum of Artin Ein Harod, Israel; the Florida Holocaust Museum in St. Petersburg, Florida; the Temple Museum of Jewish Art, Religion and Culture
of the Temple Tifereth-Israel in Beachwood, Ohio; the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage in Beachwood, Ohio; the DeCordova Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts; and at the Long Island Museum of American Art, History, and Carriages in Long Island, New York. In 2009, the wall hangings were featured at the Rumbach Street Synagogue in Budapest, Hungary in the exhibit Anne Frank in the Artists' Eyes, bringing recognition to the 80th birthday of Anne Frank.