Exhibition

A Brush with Evil: Peter Howson’s Holocaust Crowd Scene II

14 Jun 2023 – 14 Jul 2023

Regular hours

Monday
Closed
Tuesday
Closed
Wednesday
10:00 – 17:30
Thursday
10:00 – 17:30
Friday
10:00 – 17:30
Saturday
Closed
Sunday
Closed

Free admission

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Ben Uri Gallery and Museum

London, United Kingdom

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Ben Uri Gallery and Museum presents a new exhibition, A Brush with Evil, showcasing contemporary Scottish artist Peter Howson's devastating painting, Holocaust Crowd Scene II (2011).

About

Ben Uri Gallery and Museum presents a new exhibition, A Brush with Evil, showcasing contemporary Scottish artist Peter Howson's devastating painting, Holocaust Crowd Scene II (2011).

This monumental canvas, a visceral and haunting representation of the horror and brutality of the Nazi concentration camps, depicts a crowd of Jewish prisoners in various attitudes of grief, suffering and lamentation. Both the structure and composition of the painting reference classical and Christian imagery, such as Rubens’ Massacre of the Innocents and representations of the dead Christ (or pietà), powerfully underlining the prisoners’ martyrdom.

Painter, printmaker and muralist Peter Howson was born in London in 1958 to Scottish parents and moved with his family to Prestwick, near Glasgow, at the age of four. He studied at Glasgow School of Art and is a former Artist-in-Residence at the University of St Andrews, and part-time tutor at Glasgow School of Art. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including the Henry Moore Foundation award, and has established a significant reputation as a central figure in the school of Scottish figurative painting.

In 1992 Howson was commissioned by the Imperial War Museum to record the conflict in the former Yugoslavia. He was appointed official British war artist for Bosnia in 1993 and produced a number of highly emotive, sometimes controversial paintings, which surely inform his later work. In Holocaust Crowd Scene II, he creates a work that is both deeply personal and universal in its message.

The painting serves as a powerful reminder of the atrocities committed during the Holocaust and the need for continued awareness and education about the dangers of hatred and prejudice. It also highlights the important role that art plays in bearing witness to history and engaging with the human experience. 

Works by artists including George Grosz, Josef Herman, Dora Holzhandler and Leon Kossoff will also be on display.

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