Essayer OR - Gratuit
Frank Auerbach 1931 -2024
The Guardian Weekly
|November 22, 2024
Saved from the Holocaust, this artist captured the devastation of postwar Britain as ifits wounds were his own but he ultimately found salvation in painting
When I found out Frank Auerbach was dead I thought once more of the heartbreaking story of his parents, Max Auerbach and Charlotte Nora Borchardt, who saved his life by putting their child on a train from Berlin to London in 1939. Auerbach told his friend William Feaver they packed things he would need in his future life, including linen for when he married. They knew they would never see him grow up, or be there for any of his future.
They believed they would soon die. And they did, in the Holocaust of Europe's Jews.
What a future they missed. The son they saved became one of the greatest British artists of modern times who painted with a fury for life and a gravitas of grief, as if his lust and sorrow were fighting it out in each mighty brushstroke. Slashes of red or black streak across a pair of mid-period canvases, bringing savage bolts of lightning to a lime parkland or a grey heath in violent pastoral scenes that make a spring day seem like pure agony. And that's in his mature art, when he was more reconciled to life and the healing act of painting itself.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition November 22, 2024 de The Guardian Weekly.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE The Guardian Weekly
The Guardian Weekly
Price of fame
The creator of eradefining sitcom Girls on sex, stress and the dark side of celebrity
3 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Angels of deception
To test the safety and security of AI, hackers have to trick large language models into breaking their own rules. It requires ingenuity and manipulation - and can come at a deep emotional cost
9 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
COUNTRY DIARY
Richard Bray’s hives stand in a crooked line at the edge of the apple orchard, beside a low thicket of nettles.
1 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Where are the so-called anti-racists when British Jews need them?
For me, it's mostly sadness.
4 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Take flight The Lost Words pair set sights on birds
Jackie Morris and Robert Macfarlane give the Guardian extracts from their book on Britain's declining bird species
4 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Fears for spears: how to cook asparagus without blanching
\"Blanching captures that green, verdant nature of asparagus so well, and saves its minerality, too,\" agrees Bart Stratfold of Timberyard in Edinburgh, but when the season is going full tilt, it's just common sense to expand our horizons.
2 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Just divine
A major London exhibition reveals how Francisco de Zurbarán reaches into the deepest dimensions of spirituality
6 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Brave new world
Olive Kitteridge and Lucy Barton make way for a teacher haunted by trauma
2 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
My mother is addicted to gaming. What should I do?
My mother is in her 70s and addicted to playing video games such as Tetris, many different versions of solitaire and slot machine gambling games.
2 mins
May 08, 2026
The Guardian Weekly
Kneecap
Five tracks into Fenian, the listener is confronted by rapper Mo Chara expressing a desire to go and live off-grid outside a village in County Meath.
1 min
May 08, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
