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Celebrated at last, forgotten artist who captured Fifties East End slums

Eva Frankfurther is being recognised in a major exhibition at the Barbican

March 10, 2022 11:47
West Indian Waitresses by Eva Frankfurther (002)
2 min read

Exhausted West Indian waitresses seek comfort in each other’s company at a restaurant bar, their weary hands resting on the surface in front of them as they hold a ladle and a plate.

This mesmerising painting by German refugee Eva Frankfurther was among several of the artist’s works admired by the greats of British Jewish art — but for years her output was overlooked by the art establishment. 

Now, more than 60 years after her death, she is being recognised in a major exhibition at the Barbican in London.  

Ms Frankfurther was born into a cultured and assimilated Jewish family in Berlin in 1930. Following the rise of the Nazis, she escaped to London with her family in 1939. In Britain, she opted to live in a Whitechapel slum, scraping a living as a dishwasher at a Lyons Corner House. 

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