Lea Langer was born in the old central heart of Dresden, where she grew up as part of the city's Jewish community. Her father was a joiner/furniture maker and her mother worked in garment manufacturing. Lea attended school locally between 1912 and 1922, while rejecting, even as a young girl, the family's religious orthodoxy. She went on to study at the city's Decorative Arts and Crafts Academy[4] before progressing, in 1924, to the prestigious Saxon Art Academy: here she was admitted into the Masterclass of Otto Gussmann where fellow participants included Otto Griebel, Wilhelm Lachnit and Hans Grundig.[4] At the Academy she also got to know Otto Dix, whom she would come to regard as one of the most influential of her mentors.[5] She remained at The Academy till 1926.[6]
In January 1933 the NSDAP (Nazi Party)took power and quickly set about creating a one party state. Membership of any party other than the Nazi party - and particularly of the Communist Party - became illegal. Grundig nevertheless remained an active participant in resistance to the regime, as part of a group that also included Kurt Magritz and Rudi Wetzel.[1] The new government also lost no time in implementing racist ideas that had been a key theme of the Nazis in opposition: government policy in Germany became actively, and as time passed ever more violently, antisemitic. In the mid-1930s Lea Grundig's own work, reflected themes of the new Nazi age, with her cycles "Harzburger Front", "Unterm Hakenkreuz" (1936), "Der Jude ist schuld!" (1935–38), "Krieg droht!"(1935–37), "Im Tal des Todes" (1942/43) and "Ghetto".[7]
In 1935 a ban was imposed on exhibits of her work[6] and in May 1936 she was finally, albeit this time briefly, arrested.[1] Later in 1936 she traveled to Switzerland but she then returned to her home city and it was in Dresden that in May 1938 she was again arrested.[1] In March 1939 she was found guilty of "Preparing to commit High Treason" (»Vorbereitung zum Hochverrat«) as a result of her Communist activities and/or her Jewish provenance, and was sentenced to four months imprisonment. She served her sentence, which in the event lasted till November/December 1939,[8] in a prison in Dresden. However, on her release she was granted an emigration permit.[1] She emigrated to Bratislava, then the capital of the still notionally independent Slovak Republic (Slovakia). In 1940 she reached a refugee camp in Slovakia from where she moved as an exile to Palestine. Here she survived in a British internment camp at Atlit till 1942.[1] On release she remained, till the end of 1948, in Palestine, living successively in Haifa and Tel Aviv. She was again able to show her work legally: exhibitions of her work took place not just in Palestine where she was living but also in the USA, France, South Africa and Great Britain.[1] Her membership of the Palestinian Communist Party during this time was not legal. She also contributed illustrations to "Volksstimme", the newspaper of the (Jewish part of the) Palestinian party.[1]
Quotation
"I wanted to present people in such a way that you would receive and recognise their misery and suffering, and instantly feel your own rage because of it."[9]
Lea Grundig in her autobiography (1958)
"Ich wollte die Menschen so darstellen, daß man ihr Elend, ihre Leiden erkannte und zugleich Zorn darüber empfand."[9]
Lea Grundig died in 1977 at sea on the Mediterranean, while traveling on a boat called "MS Völkerfreundschaft" ("MS Peoples' Friendship"). Her body is buried at the Heidefriedhof (Heath cemetery) in Dresden. Her written archive is held at the Arts Academy in Berlin.
In 1972 Lea Grundig made a payment to the Ernst Moritz Arndt University of Greifswald, establishing a fund for the Hans and Lea Grundig Foundation. The purpose was to endow an annual prize for outstanding achievements in the fields of art, culture and culture-related teaching for students and graduates at Greifswald's Caspar David Friedrich Institute.[10] However, the prize ceased to be awarded after 1996. Following German reunification in 1990, several members of the Caspar David Friedrich Institute contended that naming a prize for "Lea Grundig", an unapologetic member of East Germany's discredited cultural and political establishment, could not be seen as acceptable.[11] The ensuing arguments continued for some years, but at the start of 2011 the University of Greifswald was able to pass the assets of Hans and Lea Grundig Foundation to the Rosa Luxemburg Foundation.[12] The Rosa Luxembourg Foundation undertook to award the Lea Grundig prize in a contemporary manner that would respect the sensibilities of Lea Grundig.[13]
Selected publications
Begei Haharegah (In the valley of slaughter), Tel Aviv, 1944. (Copy held in the Wiener Library, London)
Heiner, Maria and Rose, Dirk: Lea Grundig - The witch folder. Galerie Rose, Hamburg, (German), 2009.
Heiner, Maria: Lea Grundig - Art for the People. Hentrich & Hentrich, Berlin/Leipzig, (2nd revised edition, German), 2019.
Heiner, Maria: Lea Grundig - Art for the People. Hentrich & Hentrich, Berlin/Leipzig, (English), 2020.
Heiner, Maria: Lea Grundig - Under the Swastika. Etchings from the 1930s from the Maria Heiner Collection, Dresden. Exhibition catalogue,(German), 2022 .
Heiner, Maria (ed.) and Mendelsohn, Tina: Lea Grundig - Under the Rainbow, Illustrations from Hebrew children's and young adult books, Hentrich & Hentrich, Leipzig/Berlin, (German), 2023.
^ abcGeorg Reinhardt: Lea Grundig. 1906–1977. Zeichnungen u. Radierungen. Katalog, Schriftenreihe der Hans-Thoma-Gesellschaft. Reutlingen 1981, page 9f
^Georg Reinhardt: Lea Grundig. 1906-1977. Zeichnungen u. Radierungen. Katalog, Schriftenreihe der Hans-Thoma-Gesellschaft. Reutlingen 1981, page 15.
^ abcAndreas Schätzke: Rückkehr aus dem Exil. Bildende Künstler und Architekten in der SBZ und frühen DDR. Reimer Verlag, Berlin 1999, ISBN3496026758, page 88
^"Harzburger Front", "Unterm Hakenkreuz" = "Under the swastika"(1936), "Der Jude ist schuld!" = "The Jew is guilty" (1935–38), "Krieg droht!" = "War threatens"(1935–37), "Im Tal des Todes" = "In the valley of the dead" (1942/43) and "Ghetto".
^Sources differ as to whether she was released from prison in November or December.
^ abLea Grundig: Gesichte und Geschichte. Autobiografie, Dietz Verlag, Berlin 1958, page 93.