Sign in with Facebook   |  Login   |   Create Account

Find an Event

Do you have an event you'd like to have listed?

    VISUAL ARTS + MUSEUMS

    Lisa Rosowsky - Blood Memory: a view from the second generation

    Presented by Holocaust Museum Houston at Holocaust Museum Houston

    September 13, 2012-March 24, 2013

    Event Rating (1 vote)



    Bookmark


    Lisa Rosowsky - Blood Memory: a view from the second generation

    In the national premiere retrospective of her work,  Blood Memory: a view from the second generation, artist Lisa Rosowsky explores the "second generation" experience as the daughter of a hidden child and refugee from the Holocaust. Themes of repression and loss emerge, as do memories and stories about a family...

    In the national premiere retrospective of her work,  Blood Memory: a view from the second generation, artist Lisa Rosowsky explores the "second generation" experience as the daughter of a hidden child and refugee from the Holocaust. Themes of repression and loss emerge, as do memories and stories about a family decimated by war.

    Her new exhibit at Holocaust Museum Houston opens Sept. 14, 2012 and runs through March 24, 2013 in the Museum’s Mincberg Gallery at the Morgan Family Center, 5401 Caroline St., in Houston’s Museum District. The public is invited to a free preview reception from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Admission is free, but advance registration is required for this reception. Visit http://www.hmh.org/RegisterEvent.aspx  to RSVP online.

    Rosowsky, a Massachusetts-based artist, works in a variety of media, but is especially attracted to fabric. The translucency of silk, voile or gauze —and the images seen both on or through the cloth — is for her like the transience of memory, and the fading into history of the few remaining relatives who can speak of these memories.

    Rosowsky writes that “blood memory” is “the knowledge that cannot possibly be handed down, but is, and it lies at the heart of my work as a visual artist.” In her exhibition, this knowledge is represented through a variety of media, including quilting, sculpture, printmaking and installation. One compelling piece, “The Raitzyns” (2004), is a hand-made quilt of 11 family photographs juxtaposed with a selection from Raya Raitzyn’s antique glove collection. The white gloves indicate who survived the war, and the black gloves, those who did not.

    Rosowsky’s paternal family lived in France during World War II. As Jews, they became the targets of the Nazis, who invaded Paris in 1940. In July 1942, Rosowsky’s paternal grandparents, Vladimir and Tamara, were arrested as a part of La Grande Rafle (The Great Raid), sent to the Drancy internment camp and later to Auschwitz, where they were murdered. Before their arrest, Vladimir and Tamara were able to secure hiding for their son, André, in the area of France then not occupied. Their selfless sacrifice – what one Holocaust scholar calls a “choiceless choice” – led to their son's survival.

    Rosowsky says, “I did not directly suffer or even witness the horrors of the Holocaust, but they live on in me nonetheless. They live on in a lifetime of terrifying dreams; in the nameless fears of my childhood.” More than simply "Holocaust art," Rosowsky's work is about what it is like to inherit a legacy of silence and absence, and to transform it through art that is both personal and universal.

    Rosowsky is a member of the faculty at Massachusetts College of Art and Design, where she teaches typography and book design. She holds a bachelor’s degree from Harvard College and an master’s degree in graphic design from Yale University. Her studio is in a converted hat factory in Framingham, MA.

    Pictured: "Angel of Auschwitz," by Lisa Rosowsky. Plaster, silk, barbed wire - body approximately 66" tall; wingspan approximately 12.'


    Holocaust Museum Houston

    5401 Caroline St.
    Houston, TX 77004-6804

    Full map and directions

    Admission Info:

    The Museum is open to the public seven days a week. General admission is free.
     


    General Day and Time Info:

    The public is invited to a free preview reception from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 13, 2012. Admission is free, but advance registration is required for this reception. Visit http://www.hmh.org/RegisterEvent.aspx  to RSVP online.

    Regular Museum Hours:
    Monday to Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
    Saturday and Sunday, Noon to 5 p.m.
    First Thursday of each month, 5 to 8 p.m.

    The Museum is closed for Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Easter Sunday, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. For other holiday hours, visit the "Events" tab on the Museum’s Web site at www.hmh.org.


    Phone: 713-942-8000

    Parking:

    On site and street parking available.



    Accessibility Info: Currently, no accessibility information is available for this event.

    Official Website




    Connect with this Organization:
    Facebook  | 

    Facebook Comments

    More from Holocaust Museum Houston

    World War II Holocaust Railcar

    Presented by Holocaust Museum Houston at Holocaust Museum Houston

    March 5, 2006 - Ongoing

    Event Rating (0 votes)

    Uprooted

    Presented by Holocaust Museum Houston at Holocaust Museum Houston

    April 11-September 29, 2013

    Event Rating (0 votes)

    Through Soviet Jewish Eyes: Photography, War and the Holocaust

    Presented by Holocaust Museum Houston at Holocaust Museum Houston

    April 25-October 27, 2013

    Event Rating (0 votes)

    Upload Photos

    Do you have an event or community photo you would like to share?


    We reserve the right to reject any photo considered inappropriate to our audience.

    Upload Videos

    Do you have an event or community video you would like to share?


    We reserve the right to reject any video considered inappropriate to our audience.

    Member Reviews

    There are currently no reviews/comments for this event. Be the first to add a review/comment , and let folks know what you think!

    Audience Connect

    Use the form below to communicate with this organization.






    Other Ways to Connect with this Organization:
    Facebook  | 

      • Newsletter - 60 second sign up

        Enter your email address: