Edith Altman
Edith Altman (23 May 1931 – 19 October 2020) was a German Jewish-American artist. She emigrated from Germany to the United States at a young age. Her work investigated the lowest and the highest levels of any hierarchy. She explored systems (governmental, financial, cultural, etc.) of power, and the powerless.[1] Altman is "a student of Jewish mysticism",[2] which has influenced her work. BiographyEdith Altman was born in Altenburg, Germany on 23 May 1931.[3][4] She escaped the Nazi regime in 1938 as a little girl and emigrated to Chicago, Illinois. Her father, Max Hittman (Markus Hüttmann), escaped from Buchwenwald, where he had been imprisoned since 1938.[5] She lost her grandfathers and grandmothers on both sides of her family to the Holocaust. [6] In 1981 she attended Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, and was a resident at the University of Nebraska Omaha (UNO) Art Gallery for the term of one month.[7] Her work is in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (MCA).[8] She resides in the Chicago area.[9] Altman died on 19 October 2020, at the age of 89.[10] InfluencesAltman's work is deeply influenced by both her experience as a Holocaust survivor and her Jewish faith. In her secular work, she places an emphasis on remembering the Holocaust as a central theme.[2] Notable works
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