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Home / Arts and Entertainment / Artist's Lost Works Find UK Home After 70-Year Ordeal

Artist's Lost Works Find UK Home After 70-Year Ordeal

26 Jan

•

Summary

  • 681 artworks by Peter Kien landed at Heathrow Airport last Thursday.
  • Judy King fulfilled a deathbed promise to her mother, Helga Wolfenstein.
  • The artworks survived Nazis but were held by Czech authorities for decades.
Artist's Lost Works Find UK Home After 70-Year Ordeal

Six hundred eighty-one artworks, including drawings and manuscripts by Jewish artist and poet Peter Kien, have found a new home in London. These works, created between 1941 and 1944 in the Theresienstadt ghetto, arrived at Heathrow Airport last Thursday. Their journey to the Wiener Holocaust Library fulfills a promise made by Judy King to her late mother, Helga Wolfenstein, Kien's lover.

Kien entrusted the suitcase containing these pieces to Wolfenstein before his transport to Auschwitz, where he perished at 25. Wolfenstein's mother hid the suitcase from the Nazis, but it was later confiscated by communist authorities in Czechoslovakia. For decades, the collection was held by a museum, with recovery efforts proving difficult due to poor record-keeping and bureaucratic hurdles.

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Judy King successfully navigated complex negotiations, including proving provenance with a notarized document from her mother. Despite last-minute customs complications and weather delays, the artworks were finally released from Prague and brought to London. This significant donation adds to the Wiener Holocaust Library's existing collection of Kien's works, further preserving his legacy.

Disclaimer: This story has been auto-aggregated and auto-summarised by a computer program. This story has not been edited or created by the Feedzop team.
Six hundred eighty-one artworks by Peter Kien, created in the Theresienstadt ghetto, were recovered after decades of being held by communist authorities and are now housed in London's Wiener Holocaust Library.
Judy King fulfilled a deathbed promise to her mother, Helga Wolfenstein, Kien's lover, by navigating complex negotiations and proving ownership to secure the artworks' release from a Czech museum.
Peter Kien created his drawings, poems, and manuscripts between 1941 and 1944 in the Theresienstadt ghetto.

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