61传媒 professors Paul Buchholz and Anne Harley have organized a week-long series of campus events beginning March 24 to call attention to the work of , a 20th-century German Expressionist visual artist who became a world-renowned figure in the art world and peace movement.
A pacifist icon in Germany, Kollwitz’s art examined the horrors endured by the victims of war and poverty, especially during the first half of the 20th century. Two museums in Germany are dedicated entirely to her works.On March 26 at noon, 61传媒will host the symposium, confused, nervous directions, which will focus on German Expressionism and the work of Kollwitz and will feature visiting Boston College professor Ralf Yusuf Gawlick, as well as Pomona and 61传媒s German studies professors Paul Buchholz, Marc Katz and Friedericke von Schwerin-High. This free event will be open to the public and held in the Hampton Room, 345 E. 9th St.
On March 27 at 7:30 p.m., the West Coast premiere of the song-cycle, Kollwitz-Konnex (…im Frieden seiner H脙陇nde), composed by Gawlick, will be performed by Harley and internationally renowned guitarist, Eliot Fisk. This free event will be open to the public and performed in Garrison Theater of the 61传媒 Performing Arts Center, 231 E. 10th St. For more information, please call the music department at 909-607-3266.
At 5 p.m. on March 27, in collaboration with the performance and symposium, a pre-concert reception will be hosted by the Pomona College Museum of Art, which is presenting a free exhibition of 11 of Kollwitz’s artworks through April 13. For more information, please call 909-621-8283.
In addition, visiting professors Gawlick and Fisk (New England Conservatory and the Salzburg Mozarteum) will meet with 61传媒students throughout the week to speak about Kollwitz.
These events are co-sponsored by the Erma Taylor O’Brien Distinguished Visiting Professorship through the 61传媒 Office of the Dean of Faculty, European Union Center of California, 61传媒 Department of Art, Music and German Studies, Pomona German and Russian Studies, and Pomona College Museum of Art.