Käthe Schuftan


Käthe Fanny Schuftan was a German Jewish artist whose paintings and drawings expressed both human suffering and the aspiration of spirit, in the mid 20th century. Josef Paul Hodin wrote that she "worked in an Expressionist style reminiscent of Käthe Kollwitz' social pathos". An artist at the time of the Weimar culture, she was tortured and imprisoned by the Nazis in the early 1930s, and her work was destroyed. She escaped in 1939, arriving in Manchester, England, not long before the outbreak of the World War II; she lived and worked there until her death in 1958.

Breslau

Käthe Fanny Schuftan was born on 12 January 1899 in Breslau, now Wrocław, Poland; her father was the chemist Dr. Georg Schuftan, her mother Else née Mugdan. The chemist Paul Schuftan was her older brother. Käthe Schuftan studied at the art academy in Breslau and in Munich; one of her teachers was the graphic designer Hans Leistikow. She then worked in Breslau and became a close friend of Ernst Eckstein, one of the leading figures in the Socialist Workers' Party of Germany, SAP, who apparently committed suicide after his arrest by the Nazis in May 1933. Schuftan subsequently moved to Berlin.

Berlin

In Berlin, Käthe Schuftan and her younger sister Lotte were involved in underground activities of the SAP. In November 1933, she was detained and tortured by the SA at the former Volkshaus in Berlin-Charlottenburg, and all the pictures in her flat were destroyed. In proceedings against 24 SAP members in late 1934, the Volksgerichtshof sentenced her to two years in prison for planning high treason, i.e. an overthrow of the government by violence. In 1937, Margot Riess described Käthe's works as expressing a "primarily tragic, accusing attitude towards the world, with all its stark misery, agony and hardship". In December 1933, some of her works had been included in a Breslau exhibition of what the Nazis considered "Degenerate art"; three of her watercolours and a drawing were confiscated from Breslau museums in September 1937. She left Berlin shortly before the outbreak of World War II.

Manchester

Schuftan arrived in Manchester, England in June 1939. During the war years she worked in a munitions factory. Her obituary stated that after the war she earned her living at commercial art. She had two one-person shows of her work and exhibited in group exhibitions in Manchester. Schuftan befriended the young John Milne who later went on to work as an assistant to Barbara Hepworth before making his own career. Her work was selected for the annual exhibition of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts three times between 1940–1942. She exhibited with the Manchester Group, which included L. S. Lowry, Emmanuel Levy, Jose Christopherson and Emmeline Boulton at the Mid-Day Studios and other galleries. Schuftan died on 21 February 1958, sadly only a short time after the German government awarded her financial compensation for her suffering under the Nazis. A retrospective exhibition of her work was held at the Salford Museum and Art Gallery in June 1958. Her obituary in The Manchester Guardian was written by Margo Ingham, founder of the Mid-Day Studios, the Manchester Group and the Manchester Arts Club.

Exhibitions