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Review: Insiders/Outsiders

This book may be about the past but it is also about the present, says Gabriel Josipovici

January 31, 2020 14:13
Jewish and Muslim children, Haifa, Israel (1959) by Dorothy Bohm
2 min read

Insiders/Outsiders Monica Bohm Duchen Ed. (Lund Humphries, £40)

You may not have noticed, but there’s a year-long nation-wide festival taking place, consisting of art exhibitions, films, dance and theatre performances, talks and discussions and much else, celebrating and exploring the contributions made to British art and culture by the refugees from Nazi Europe. 

The driving force behind this is Monica Bohm Duchen, the art critic and scholar, and it is backed by a long and distinguished list of sponsors. The present, lavishly illustrated book, edited by Bohm Duchen, with a preface by Norman Rosenthal and an introduction by Daniel Snowman, consists of a series of commissioned essays on every aspect of the topic, exploring émigré contributions to the visual arts, architecture, design, photography, art history, publishing, collecting and much else. 

There are also contextualising essays on Hampstead in the 1930s and ’40s as a Modernist sanctuary; on artistic life in the British internment camps in which many of the refugees were at first locked up; and on key British supporters, such as Roland Penrose, Herbert Read, and George Bell, Bishop of Chichester.