Kristallnacht: The Night of Crystal Death

Opus 1, 1991, intaglio vitreograph on Arches
cover white, ed. 50,
image size: 14 %x 11% inches

May 4 – August 10, 2008
Mezzanine Gallery

Kristallnacht: The Night of Crystal Death is a portfolio of intaglio vitreographs on paper that confront the horror of a nationwide pogrom against German Jews that took place on the night of November 9, 1938. This important and challenging group of works provided artist Erwin Eisch with an opportunity to confront a horror from his homeland's past.

Eisch, who has childhood memories of Kristallnacht, hails from the Eastern Bavarian village of Frauneau, famed for its glass blowing and cutting. Eisch's medium is also glass, and he has created his Kristallnacht portfolio as a means to "relieve some of the clinging shame that weighs down upon us Germans, and to bring courage to all those who oppose hate and violence and the destruction of the environment, today and forever."

Kristallnacht, which was orchestrated by the German government to seem a spontaneous uprising of the German people, portended the Holocaust. Nearly all German synagogues, and many cemeteries and Jewish businesses, were destroyed within a few hours, and up to an estimated 2,500 deaths are attributed to the event, either from direct riot violence or the resulting 30,000 arrests and concentration camp internments of German Jews. The name Kristallnacht itself is a source of some controversy, because the term connotes the original sardonic intent of Nazi propagandists to associate the events which, for most Germans, comprise a repulsive piece of history, with a glamorous metaphor.

Sherwin Miller Museum of Jewish Art - 2021 East 71st Street - Tulsa, Oklahoma 74136
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