Kurt Lorein Victor Peiser – Berlin Boulevard 1931

£390.00

1 in stock

Etching with wide margins on thick buff paper. Signed with initials VP and dated 31 in the plate (lower right), further inscribed, in ink, 5 cm below the image: Victor Peiser 31 – followed by an indistinct name (surname beginning ‘C’). Hinged to mount using acid free board and framed.

Image: 9 1/8 x 6 ¾ in. (23.3 x 17 cm.)
Frame: 21 1/8 x 16 1/8 in. (53.7 x 40.8 cm.)

The etching is slightly ambiguous in that it is signed ‘VP’ 31, in the plate, further inscribed ‘Victor Peiser’ by hand, whereas normally he would sign, ‘K Peiser’. Full name: Kurt Lorein, Victor, Peiser. It may have been the artist was protecting his identity for fear of reprisals.

It is not clear who the other signature is or what connection they had with the print.

Description

This interesting etching depicts demonic monsters happily dancing before three men of Jewish descent. One monster is holding the emblem of an eagle, ‘symbol of the Nazi Party’.

It seems likely that the scene is recording the events of September 12, 1931, when Nazi thugs – by one account more than 1000 of them – harassed and physically attacked people suspected of being Jews as they walked on a central Berlin boulevard. Although no one was killed, the riot was significant for being one of the first such public displays of violent anti-Semitism in a country that still purported to be democratic. The event took place nearly a year and a half before Germany’s democratic Weimar Republic was replaced by the Third Reich.