Self-portrait by Peter Kien

Peter Kien (1 January 1919, in Varnsdorf, Czechoslovakia – October 1944, in Auschwitz, Nazi Germany) was a Jewish artist and poet active at the Theresienstadt concentration camp.[1][2] He died at the age of twenty-five.

Education

The name of Franz Peter Kien, a prominent figure among many outstanding artists imprisoned in the Terezín (Theresienstadt) ghetto during World War II, is usually associated with the opera The Emperor of Atlantis by Viktor Ullmann. In addition to the libretto of that opera, Kien left significant artwork, poetry, and plays.

Kien spent his first 10 years in Varnsdorf, an industrial town near the Czech-German border. During the financial crisis his family moved to Brno. In 1936, Kien graduated with honors from a German high school. The certificate contains special notes on his remarkable skills in writing and drawing. The same year, Kien enrolled in Prof. Willy Novak’s class at the Academy of Fine Arts in Prague and in the graphic design school Officina Pragensis under Prof. Hugo Steiner-Prag.

In 1939, after the Nuremberg Laws were enforced, Kien was expelled from the Academy, but continued to work at the Officina Pragensis under Prof. Jaroslav Švab). He started to teach art at the Vinohrady synagogue. Married to Ilse Stranska in 1940, he tried to emigrate with his family.

In December 1941, Kien was deported to Terezin. Over a thousand drawings, sketches, designs and paintings originate from his pre-Terezin years. Consigned to the drafting room of the Technical Department in Terezin, Kien produced numerous portraits, landscapes, drawings and genre sketches. His artwork radiates light, hope and warmth. By contrast, his writings of this period are mostly tragic and hopeless.

In Terezin, Kien's social satirical play Marionettes, staged by Gustav Schorsch. was performed 25 times. Gideon Klein set Kien's poetic cycle Plague to music. His other plays written in the ghetto include Medea, Bad dream and On the Border. They found their way to the Wiener Library in London, but were never published and never performed.

On 16 October 1944, Kien was deported to Auschwitz with his parents and his wife in the final transport in October 1944. He died from disease soon after his arrival. None of the others survived.

Works

Kien's portrait of fellow inmate Bedřich Fritta.

Between his arrival to Terezin in 1941 and his deportation to Auschwitz, Kien was officially the director of the Technical Drawing Office of the Jewish Self Administration. Using stolen paper, he sketched many depictions of living conditions in the Terezin ghetto. These works are among the most important works documenting that Terezin was a concentration camp rather than the model Jewish settlement the Nazis portrayed to outsiders. His works accurately reflect that its inhabitants were confined in inhuman conditions and treated severely.

Kien also wrote the libretto to Viktor Ullmann's Der Kaiser von Atlantis, a one-act chamber opera that was composed in (originally on the back of a deportation list due to a lack of paper) and rehearsed in Terezin between 1943 and 1944 but never performed there.[3] It was first performed in 1975 in Amsterdam and was recorded for Decca in Leipzig in 1990.[4] An English Touring Opera production was performed at the Royal Opera House in London and toured England in 2012.[4] He developed many works and he loved art.

References

  1. František Petr Kien Archived 23 November 2007 at the Wayback Machine
  2. "Helga King – Palm Springs Art – PalmSprings.com". Archived from the original on 5 June 2010. Retrieved 11 October 2007.
  3. Brown, Kellie D. (2020). The sound of hope: Music as solace, resistance and salvation during the holocaust and world war II. McFarland. p. 95. ISBN 978-1-4766-7056-0.
  4. 1 2 Haas, Michael (October 2012). "When Death Went on Strike". Jewish Renaissance. 12 (1): 38–39.
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