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Szalit-Marcus, Rachel, 1894-1942

 Person

Dates

  • Usage: 1894 - 1942

Biography

Rachel Szalit-Marcus was a painter and book illustrator. She spent her childhood in Lodz and in 1911 went to study at the Munich Fines Arts Academy. There she met and married Julius Szalit, a successful Jewish actor, and they were together until he committed suicide 1919. In 1916, they moved to Berlin, where Rachel exhibited with the artists of the Secession group and became a member of the November group, young avant-garde artists who joined forces after the November Revolution of 1918. When the Nazis assumed power in 1933, Rachel Szalit-Marcus fled to Paris, a haven for refugee artists. The “Paris School” artists were considered degenerate and banned when France fell to Germany in 1940. In 1942, she was arrested and sent to Auschwitz concentration camp where she was murdered. She painted portraits, flowers, and still-lifes but little remains of her work after her Paris studio was ransacked by Nazis. Her best-known works consist of lithographic illustrations to books by Mendele Mokher Seforim, Shalom Aleichem, Israel Zangwill, Heinrich Heine, and Martin Buber.

Found in 1 Collection or Record:

"Menshelakh un stsenes : zekhtsen tseykhenungen tsu shlum-elikhms verk" or "Menshelakh and scenes: sixteen drawings to Sholem Aleichem works", 1922

 File
Identifier: B333.08.0008.0002
Abstract "Menshelakh and scenes: sixteen drawings to Sholem Aleichem works" contains sixteen illustrations by Rachel Szalit-Marcus that depict charaters and scenes from Sholem Aleichem's works. Also in the Lowenstein collection are four original signed lithographs by Rachel Szalit-Marcus, three of which are the originals for this publications. Though the relationship between Maria Lowenstein and Rachel Szalit-Marcus is unknown, Marcus' works mixed in with Maria Lowensteins indicates a relationship...
Dates: 1922

Filtered By

  • Subject: Jewish women in the Holocaust X