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Call for papers: “’Degenerate’ art. A French/German cross-history
On going
| Updated on 25 October 2024
Ongoing
In conjunction with the exhibition “’Degenerate’ Art. Le procès de l’art moderne sous le nazisme” on view at the Musée national Picasso-Paris from February 18 to May 25, 2025, and the Répertoire des acteurs du marché de l’art en France sous l’Occupation (RAMA) program of the Institut national d’histoire de l’art, the Musée national Picasso-Paris, the Institut national d’histoire de l’art, the Musée d’art et d’histoire du judaïsme, the German Center for Art History (DFK Paris) are organizing an international colloquium on this theme in Paris on March 27 and 28, 2025.
The Nazi term “degenerate art” refers to a public campaign of exclusion, defamation and destruction of modern art, spanning more than a decade. The term “degeneracy” appeared at the end of the 18th century in various disciplines (natural history, medicine, anthropology, art history, etc.) until it crystallized at the heart of the National Socialist “worldview”, and served as a vehicle for the deployment of racist and anti-Semitic theories, particularly in the field of art history.
During the campaign against “degenerate art”, some 20,000 modern works were seized by the National Socialist regime from German public collections and removed from museums. After the enactment of the “Law on the Confiscation of the Products of Degenerate Art” in May 1938, it became clear that these works would not be returned to their original repositories.
Destruction took place in May 1936 at the Berlin Nationalgalerie, the first institution to acquire a Cézanne painting, where forty-four canvases were reduced to ashes in the boiler room of the former Kronprinzen-Palais; and around 5,000 works were burnt in the courtyard of Berlin’s main railway station on March 30, 1939, as “ restant non exploitable ”, according to a terminology specific to the language of the Third Reich.
A significant proportion of the so-called “degenerate” works, considered “exploitable”, were sold at the sale organized by the Fischer gallery in Lucerne on June 30, 1939, and above all via four dealers who handled some 9,000 works – Hildebrand Gurlitt, Karl Bucholz, Ferdinand Möller, Bernhard Böhmer – and who themselves relied on a network of numerous intermediaries.
The attack on modern art culminated in the defamatory “Entartete Kunst” (“Degenerate Art”) exhibition, held in Munich in 1937, which included over 600 works confiscated by the Nazis, by a hundred artists, from Otto Dix to Ernst Ludwig Kirchner, from Wassily Kandinsky to Emil Nolde, from Paul Klee to Max Beckmann, from Otto Freundlich to Kurt Schwitters. This propaganda event was part of a series of exhibitions that began in 1933 (Dresden, Mannheim, Karlsruhe, etc.) and continued in Germany and Austria until 1944.
The symposium draws on recent research and encourages the participation of young researchers. In particular, it aims to explore the echoes of the “degenerate” art campaign in France, the parallels between the French and German situations, the repercussions on artists and gallerists in France, and the positions of French critics and museum curators.
The main topics will be:
- The emergence and dissemination of the notion of “degeneracy” and its application to art history.
- The positions and reactions of various actors (artists, critics, historians, museum staff, etc.) to the campaign against “degenerate art”, particularly in France. Particular attention will be paid to papers proposals dealing with the reactions of artists designated as “degenerate” and transiting through France, faced with this campaign of denigration, destruction, dilapidation and obliteration of the avant-garde.
- The organization of “degenerate art” exhibitions, the scenography and content of these exhibitions, and their reception. Attention will also be paid to counter-exhibition projects organized in reaction to the Nazi campaign.
- The “degenerate art” trade and its implications in the French context.
- The historiography of “degenerate art” from 1945 to the present day. Developments in this field of study, the position of museums and institutional actors with regard to this issue, and new research prospects.
Transportation, meals and accommodation in Paris are covered on a fixed-price basis.
Proposals should consist of a single file headed by the name of the person responding to the call; they should include a short biography (maximum one page) and the communication proposal (maximum 500 words). They may be written in French or English.
Deadline for submission to colloqueartdegenere@gmail.com: November 30, 2024