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LEARN HEBREW

Hendrik Werkman, one of the Netherlands’ most important graphic artists.
Updated: 16/Jun/2008 18:21
Hendrik Werkman, The Children in the Forest, from ‘The Werewolf’, Hassidic Legends (Suite I-1).
Photo: JHM/coll. Henkels
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AMSTERDAM (EJP)---The Jewish Historical Museum in Amsterdam presents from 27 June to 30 November 2008 the exhibition Hendrik Werkman: The Blue Barge.

The exhibition contains Werkman’s preparatory studies for the suites of prints he made for The Blue Barge during World War II as an act of resistance against the Nazi occupation.
 
The most famous of these is 'Chassidische Legenden' (Hasidic Legends). Many of the handcrafted prints bear annotations by Werkman.
 
Hendrik Nicolaas Werkman (1882-1945), best known as a member of Groningen’s artists’ association De Ploeg (The Plough), was one of the Netherlands’ most important graphic artists.
 
His unique visual language was expressed in countless experiments with printing techniques. During the war he established The Blue Barge together with three friends. One of these was the clergyman August Henkels, who gave Werkman a copy of Martin Buber’s Legend of Baal-Shem Tov (1932) in 1941.
 
Werkman made a series of twenty beautiful illustrations for these Hasidic stories. The texts and images were an act of resistance against the Nazi occupation and were intended to give courage to the Dutch people during the war years. As a result of his resistance work Werkman was executed by firing squad by the Gestapo on 10 April 1945.
 
In 1976 August Henkels’ widow presented the JHM with Werkman’s letters to Henkels and his wife plus the complete series of proof sheets for The Blue Barge (including the Hasidic Legends).
 
The JHM is exhibiting the prints (more than 60 pieces) and the correspondence between Werkman and Henkels for the first time since 1977.
 
Hendrik Werkman: The Blue Barge, Joods Historisch Museum, 27 June – 30 November 2008.
 
The museum, located Jonas Daniel Meijerplein 2-4 in Amsterdam, is open daily from 11.00 to 17.00.
 
T: +31 (0)20 531 0370 
 

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