Marcel Słodki

Polish artist From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marcel Słodki (Polish: Marceli Słodki; 11 November 1892  1943/1944) was a Polish painter, graphic artist and stage designer. He was Post-Impressionist associated with the dadaist movement. He died during World War II, after being arrested in France and sent to the Nazi German Auschwitz concentration camp c.1943–1944.[1][2]

Born
Marceli Słodki

(1892-11-11)11 November 1892
Łódź, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died1944(1944-00-00) (aged 51–52)
KnownforPainting
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Marcel Słodki
A (presumed) portrait of Słodki by Leopold Gottlieb, early 1930s
Born
Marceli Słodki

(1892-11-11)11 November 1892
Łódź, Congress Poland, Russian Empire
Died1944(1944-00-00) (aged 51–52)
EducationAcademy of Fine Arts, Munich
Known forPainting
Movement
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Biography

Słodki was born to a secular, liberal Jewish family in Łódź (then part of the Russian Empire). His father was a bank director. From 1910 to 1913 Słodki studied in Munich at the Academy of Fine Arts and then spent the next year travelling through Europe.[1][2]

Poster for the opening of Cabaret Voltaire, lithograph by Marcel Słodki

He moved to Switzerland in 1914, where for a time he worked with architects designing town plans. He became involved early on with the Dada art movement. He designed the poster for the 1916 opening of Dadaist performance at Cabaret Voltaire in Zürich. His work was presented there beginning in 1917, and he held his first individual exhibition, also in Zürich, in 1919. From 1921 to 1924 he lived in Germany, where he designed theater sets for the cabaret Die wilde Bühne and worked on the Berlin magazine Die Aktion. Later, he moved to France. His works were shown at several exhibitions, including Salon des indépendants (Paris, 1928), an exhibition in Bruges (1933), an exhibition in Warsaw (1934, possibly related to Żydowskie Towarzystwo Krzewienia Sztuk Pięknych [pl]), Salon d'Automne (Paris, 1937), and an exhibition in London (1938).[1][2]

He married a painter, Macha Boulanger.[2]

Following the German invasion and occupation of France, he lived in Brive-la-Gaillarde, first continuing with his public work, even exhibiting it, but eventually going into hiding. He was arrested in 1943 in Paris, but was released or escaped (accounts vary). He hid in woodlands near Paris, and then moved to Bourg-Saint-Maurice, Chambéry (then under Italian occupation). After the Germans took control of Chambéry, he was arrested again, on 14 December 1943, and was sent to the Auschwitz concentration camp where he died within a year.[1][2]

Works

His art style is described as post-impressionist. He has been associated with the Dada art movement, as well as the Polish Kapists art movement. His early works were also influenced by Cubism, but most did not survive, as they were destroyed by the artist himself in an act he later regretted. Most of his paintings are landscapes and still lifes, although he created some portraits as well as several paintings of fishermen and circus artists.[1]

References

Further reading

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