Jankel Adler
Medium: etching on paper
Materials and techniques: ink (medium), etching (technique), paper (support)
Framed: 66.3 x 54.5 cm
Name: Jankel Adler (1895-1949)
Other names: Yankel Adler, Jankiel Adler, Jakub Adler
Born: Tuszyn, nr. Łódź, Poland
Died: Aldbourne, England
Year of migration: 1940
Jankel Adler was born into a large orthodox Jewish family on 26 July 1895 in Tuszyn, near Łódź in the Congress Kingdom of Poland (now Poland). He studied engraving in Belgrade in 1912, then art in Barmen and Düsseldorf until 1914. Adler returned to Poland in 1918, becoming a founder-member of Young Yiddish, a Łódź-based group of painters and writers dedicated to the expression of their Jewish identity. During the First World War, he was conscripted into the Russian army, but resettled in Germany in 1920, notably meeting Marc Chagall in Berlin, before returning to Barmen. In 1922 Adler moved to Düsseldorf, joined the Young Rhineland circle, became friends with Otto Dix and helped found 'Die Kommune' and the International Exhibition of revolutionary artists in Berlin. His Planetarium frescos in 1925 were highly successful and he exhibited widely. In 1931, at the Düsseldorf Academy, he formed an important friendship with Paul Klee, who had a profound influence on his style.
In 1933 Adler was forced to flee Nazi Germany at the height of his success after his work was declared 'degenerate' – he was later included in the infamous 'Entartete Kunst' (Degenerate Art) exhibition in 1937. His arrival in Paris can be seen as part of a 'second wave' of artists from Russia, who were drawn west to Germany, then to France, though Adler continued to travel widely until 1937 when he worked with the printmaker Stanley William Hayter at Atelier 17 in Paris. He also met Picasso, who became the second major influence on his style. Adler joined the Polish Army upon the outbreak of the Second World War and was evacuated to Scotland in 1940, where he was demobilized owing to poor health. In Glasgow, he and Josef Herman – whom he had known previously in Poland – became members of the influential Glasgow New Art Club founded by J. D. Fergusson. Adler moved to London in 1943, sharing a house with 'the two Roberts', the painters Colquhoun and MacBryde, whose style he greatly influenced; he died 25 April 1949 in Aldbourne, Wiltshire, England. A memorial exhibition was organised by the Arts Council in 1951 and a posthumous exhibition on Jankel Adler, Mark Gertler and Bernard Meninsky was held at Ben Uri Gallery in 1957. Adler's work is held in UK collections including Aberdeen Art Gallery, Glasgow Museums Resource Centre, Pallant House Gallery, Swindon Museum and Art Gallery and Tate Britain, as well as in international collections in Australia, Germany, Israel and the USA. A posthumous major survey exhibition was held in Wuppertal (2018), and a survey of his British years at Ben Uri Gallery (2019).
Provenance
Acquisition purchased: from Peter Gidal and his mother 2008
Display status: not on display
Wystawy
2009
Homeless & Hidden 1: World Class Collection Homeless & Hidden
Ben Uri Gallery
2010
Apocalypse: unveiling a lost masterpiece by Marc Chagall and 50 selected masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection
Osborne Samuel
2012
Chaim Soutine and his Contemporaries - from Russia to Paris and School of London works from the Ben Uri Collection
Ben Uri Gallery
2013
Chagall, Soutine and the School of Paris: touring exhibition
Manchester Jewish Museum
2015
Out of Chaos – Ben Uri: 100 Years in London
Somerset House
2016
100 for 100: Ben Uri Past, Present & Future
Christie's South Kensington
2017
Entartete Kunst (“Degenerate Art”) Remembered
Ben Uri (Online)
2018
Exodus: masterworks from the Ben Uri Collection
Bushey Museum
2018
Acquisitions and Long-Term Loan Highlights Since 2001
Ben Uri Gallery
2019
Expression of Freedom: Bunt and Yung-Yidish - an exhibition that was not here...
Museum of the City of Łódź