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    23.10.2026 –
    14.02.2027

    Eva Frankfurther

    Docker’s Dinner Break, c. 1956-57, Oil on Paper, Private Collection

    Eva Frankfurther (1930-1959) was born into a cultured and assimilated Jewish family in Berlin in 1930. Following the rise of National Socialism in Germany, she escaped to London with her family in 1939. Between 1946 and 1951 she studied at St Martin’s School of Art.

    Disaffected with the London art scene, after graduating, she moved to Whitechapel in London’s East End, the home for several generations of successive waves of migrant communities. For the next six years, she earned her living working the evening shift as a counter-hand at Lyons Corner House and, later, in a sugar refinery, leaving herself free to paint during the day.

    Inspired by artists as diverse as Rembrandt, Käthe Kollwitz and Picasso, she took as her subject the ethnically diverse, largely immigrant population among whom she lived and worked. Her studies of the new communities of West Indians, Cypriots and Pakistanis, portrayed both at work and at rest, with empathy and dignity, are her greatest achievement.

    Between 1948 and 1958 Frankfurther also travelled extensively in Europe, writing lively and perceptive letters home about the art and people she encountered. In her last year she spent eight months living and working in Israel, returning to London in October 1958. Three months later, suffering from depression, she took her own life at the age of twenty-eight. Despite the brevity of her artistic career, she left behind an important body of work based above all, on compassion for the dignity of ordinary working people of all ethnic groups and communities.

    For the first time, her sensitive portraits and studies of everyday life are now being presented to the public once again in a solo exhibition in Germany. Through more than 40 drawings and paintings, her talent for drawing and painting, as well as her keen and sensitive powers of observation, are clearly evident.

    SUPPORT
    Сircle of friends Freundeskreis Kunsthaus Dahlem – Bernhard Heiliger e. V.