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Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Friday, August 27 2021 - 02:03
AsiaNet
How National Socialist artists continued their careers after 1945 / "Divinely Gifted". National Socialism's favoured artists in the Federal Republic / 27 August to 5 December 2021
BERLIN, August 25, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Many renowned protagonists of the National Socialist art scene continued 
working in the Federal Republic as full-time visual artists after 1945. They 
produced works to be displayed in public spaces, received lucrative commissions 
from government, industry and church organisations, taught at art academies, 
submitted proposals to art competitions and were represented in exhibitions. 
Their designs for statues, reliefs and tapestries on public squares and façades 
or in theatre and cinema foyers have left their mark to this day on the face of 
many city centres. They were able to profit from the anti-modernist climate in 
the early post-war decades.

In an exhibition opening on 27 August 2021, the Deutsches Historisches Museum 
takes the "Divinely Gifted List" as the point of departure for a study of the 
largely neglected topic of the post-war careers of such "divinely gifted" 
artists as Arno Breker, Hermann Kaspar, Willy Meller, Paul Mathias Padua, 
Werner Peiner, Richard Scheibe and Adolf Wamper. The list was first compiled on 
behalf of Adolf Hitler and Joseph Goebbels in August 1944: 378 artists, among 
them 114 sculptors and painters, were considered "indispensable" and were 
exempted from military duty and work assignments. 

The exhibition "'Divinely Gifted'. National Socialism's favoured artists in the 
Federal Republic" shows for the first time the strong presence of these artists 
in public spaces, but also in the institutions of political, economic and 
cultural life in post-war Germany. It also examines their networks, the choice 
of their motifs, and the reception of their works as well as the related 
questions of continuity and adaptation to the new circumstances. Reinforced by 
the parallel exhibition "documenta. Politics and Art"  
(https://www.dhm.de/en/press/documenta-politics-and-art/ )  (18.6.2021 – 
9.1.2022), the idea of a supposedly radical, cultural-political new beginning 
in the young Federal Republic has thus had to be revised. 

The exhibition is supported by the Kulturstiftung des Bundes 

Long Version Press Release: 
https://www.dhm.de/en/press/press-release/how-national-socialist-artists-continued-their-careers-after-1945 



Media Contact:

Deutsches Historisches Museum
Abteilungsdirektor Kommunikation
Dr. Stephan Adam
Unter den Linden 2
10117 Berlin

Presse- und Öffentlichkeitsarbeit
Daniela Lange
T +49-30-20304-410 
presse@dhm.de
www.dhm.de

SOURCE: Deutsches Historisches Museum