New Titles Art in Exile: Polish painters in post-war Britain
Art in Exile: Polish painters in post-war Britain
(Published by Redcliffe Press )
This book is about a body of painters who have generally been marginalised by British art historians – the Polish exiles from war and persecution who made their homes and careers in Britain before or after 1939.It takes ten of them, explores their origins, their often hazardous escape from occupied Europe, their reception and the development of their work.Some who were personally known to the author, such as Herman and Ruszkowski, are, along with Gotlib and others, the subject of searching enquiry; a further group, perhaps better known, like Adler and Potworowski, are also covered.The book has chapters on the Polish context from which they came, on the problems East European art has encountered in the West, and on the Polish artistic community in Britain as a whole. The appearance of this book is timely.Since the author first began to study the subject the perception of Poland in Britain has changed utterly.Further integration of Poland into the European community should lead to further exchanges of art between the two countries.If it does not, it may not be for economic reasons alone, but may be further evidence of the reluctance of Western art authorities to take East European art, as a whole, seriously. The book suggests a beginning in better understanding by starting with those Poles who became British, and whose work for the most part is still here, a part of British art that is for ever Polish.
244 x 172mm , 400 pages, with 100 colour and 50 mono illustrations