Undid revision 1061416133 by Qwerwino (talk) Qwerwino posted claims that are proven libelous and removed document proving that libel was committed. This violates Wilipedia libel policy and is illegal. Tag: Undo |
Firefangledfeathers (talk | contribs) this is a draft of my preferred version, including a brief mention of the forgery controversy and a minimal amount of attribution when it comes to her life story; I will self-revert in a moment, as I want to discuss rather than edit war Tag: Reverted |
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[[Image:Rosemarie_Koczy_Tapestry_Torah_1977.jpg|thumb|left|''Tapestry'', "Torah", Rosemarie Koczy, 1977]] |
[[Image:Rosemarie_Koczy_Tapestry_Torah_1977.jpg|thumb|left|''Tapestry'', "Torah", Rosemarie Koczy, 1977]] |
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Koczy was born March 5, 1939, in [[Recklinghausen]], Germany, the eldest daughter of Martha Wusthoff and Karl Koczy. |
Koczy was born March 5, 1939, in [[Recklinghausen]], Germany, the eldest daughter of Martha Wusthoff and Karl Koczy. According to her memoir, she and her parents were persecuted by the Nazis for their Jewish ancestry. Fifty years after the war's end, she described being deported in 1942 at the age of 3, surviving two [[concentration camps]], first at Traunstein ([[Dachau concentration camp|Dachau]]) and then at Ottenhausen ([[Struthof]]), writing of that time: |
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<blockquote>We worked in the fields every day. I saw the killings, the shavings, the bleachings, the torture and hunger, the cold, typhus, tuberculosis. Death was all around! <ref>Outsiders & Intuits (2009) "[http://outsidersandintuits.blogspot.com/2009/07/rosemarie-koczy.html Rosemarie Koczy]"</ref> </blockquote> |
<blockquote>We worked in the fields every day. I saw the killings, the shavings, the bleachings, the torture and hunger, the cold, typhus, tuberculosis. Death was all around! <ref>Outsiders & Intuits (2009) "[http://outsidersandintuits.blogspot.com/2009/07/rosemarie-koczy.html Rosemarie Koczy]"</ref> </blockquote> |
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She died December 12, 2007, in [[Croton-on-Hudson]], New York. A photo of her gravestone can be found on page 168 of the book ''Rosemarie Koczy: the Shroud Weaver.'' <ref name="Miyawaki2009" /> |
She died December 12, 2007, in [[Croton-on-Hudson]], New York. A photo of her gravestone can be found on page 168 of the book ''Rosemarie Koczy: the Shroud Weaver.'' <ref name="Miyawaki2009" /> |
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In November 2017, during an exhibition of more than 100 of her works bequeathed to the city of Recklinghausen, her life story was examined by a local historian and a town official, who |
In November 2017, during an exhibition of more than 100 of her works bequeathed to the city of Recklinghausen, her life story was examined by a local historian and a town official, who wrote that her memoir had been forged.<ref name="DW.COM 2017">{{cite web|url=http://www.dw.com/en/artist-rosemarie-koczy-allegedly-faked-her-holocaust-survivors-story/a-41301763|title=Artist Rosemarie Koczy allegedly faked her Holocaust survivor's story - Arts - 08.13.2017|date=2017-11-13|website=DW.COM|access-date=2017-11-13}}</ref> Koczy's widowed husband rejected these claims.<ref>https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/15/arts/design/rosemarie-koczy-holocaust.html</ref> |
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==Art== |
==Art== |
Revision as of 17:48, 21 December 2021
Rosemarie Inge Koczy ([1] She compiled a three-volume memoir titled I Weave You a Shroud[2][3][4] that was published by Queensborough Community College and the City University of New York Art Gallery and Museum.[1]
March 5, 1939 – December 12, 2007 (aged 68)) was an artist, teacher, known for her many works dealing with the Holocaust.Life
Koczy was born March 5, 1939, in Recklinghausen, Germany, the eldest daughter of Martha Wusthoff and Karl Koczy. According to her memoir, she and her parents were persecuted by the Nazis for their Jewish ancestry. Fifty years after the war's end, she described being deported in 1942 at the age of 3, surviving two concentration camps, first at Traunstein (Dachau) and then at Ottenhausen (Struthof), writing of that time:
We worked in the fields every day. I saw the killings, the shavings, the bleachings, the torture and hunger, the cold, typhus, tuberculosis. Death was all around! [5]
Remaining at Ottenhausen for several years after its liberation in 1945, she was raised afterwards by her maternal grandparents, her mother briefly and several foster families and orphanages.
In 1959 Koczy left Germany for Geneva, Switzerland. She was accepted into the Ecole des Arts Decoratifs in 1961, where she received her diploma with distinction four years later.
Koczy's first marriage (which brought her Swiss citizenship) ended in divorce. She married composer Louis Pelosi, whom she had met at the MacDowell Colony,[6] in 1984. She became an American citizen in 1989.
Koczy created a community art school outside of Geneva in the 1970s and in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, where she taught privately over the last twenty years of her life. After 1995 she gave free lessons to elderly and disabled residents of Maple House in Ossining, where she supplied materials, arranged shows and acquisitions (many by her and her husband). The couple also hosted annual art and music gatherings in their home for many years.
She died December 12, 2007, in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. A photo of her gravestone can be found on page 168 of the book Rosemarie Koczy: the Shroud Weaver. [7]
In November 2017, during an exhibition of more than 100 of her works bequeathed to the city of Recklinghausen, her life story was examined by a local historian and a town official, who wrote that her memoir had been forged.[8] Koczy's widowed husband rejected these claims.[9]
Art
Concentrating upon tapestry, she mounted two solo museum exhibitions in Geneva (1970 and 1979); she produced more than seventy fiber works in fifteen years. During this time she also met Peggy Guggenheim, who commissioned a tapestry from her and introduced her to Thomas Messer, then-curator of the Guggenheim Museum.[10]
In the mid 1970s she began her works dealing with the Holocaust. In 1980, Koczy accepted a fellowship to the MacDowell Colony and started creating pen-and-ink drawings memorializing Holocaust victims. She had created more than 12,000 of these drawings before her death. In her later years Koczy insisted they be shown only accompanied by a statement in English, French, and German which begins:
"The drawings I make every day are titled 'I Weave You A Shroud.' They are burials I offer to those I saw die in the camps."
She also completed hundreds of paintings, wood sculptures, and other works on the subject.
She was the first female recipient of the Francis Greenburger Award,[11] chosen and presented by Thomas Messer at the Guggenheim in 1986.
Koczy's work is housed in institutions such as the Guggenheim (both in New York and Venice), the Illinois Holocaust Museum and Education Center, the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Kupferberg Holocaust Resource Center and Art Gallery/Museum, the Collection de l'art brut in Lausanne (where in 1985 she inaugurated Jean Dubuffet's Neuve Invention Annex), Museum im Lagerhaus in St. Gallen, Museum Charlotte Zander in Bonnigheim (Germany), Galerie Miyawaki [7] in Kyoto (Japan), Kunsthalle Recklinghausen, the Gedenkstatte Buchenwald, Musée de la Création Franche in Begles [12] (France), Museum Dr. Guislain in Gent Belgium and Yad Vashem, the Israeli Holocaust Memorial Museum in Jerusalem (which in 2007 accepted her largest sculpture, Deportation of the Children, into its permanent collection). An exhibition of over 100 of her works ran at the City University of New York - Queensborough Community College Art Gallery in 2013-2014, [13] accompanied by a monograph [14] dedicated to her work.
Of her art, Goya scholar Fred Licht has written:[15]
Koczy's drawings have a moral aspect ... One receives the impression that she feels it her duty to execute (them), and duty cannot exist without a sense of moral responsibility.
Outsider art critic Roger Cardinal (Raw Vision, no. 63) recalled:
I once saw a wall display of several dozen of these images ... The combination of ceaseless proliferation and searing emotion made an impact that struck to the very core of human feeling.
Thomas Messer wrote:[15]
Koczy's art, in the last analysis, speaks to us through formal authority and through convincing resolution, leaving us thereby in a state of catharsis, uplifted and hopeful.
References
- ^ Miller, Stephen, "Rosemarie Koczy, 68, Holocaust artist", The New York Sun, December 19, 2007
- ^ Rosemarie Koczy (2009) "I Weave You a Shroud", QCC Art Gallery Press, New York. ISBN 0-9764756-2-6
- ^ Rosemarie Koczy (2012) "I Weave You a Shroud, Vol. II", QCC Art Gallery Press, New York. ISBN 978-1936658-03-9
- ^ Rosemarie Koczy (2013) "I Weave You a Shroud, Vol. III", QCC Art Gallery Press, New York. ISBN 978-1936658-23-7
- ^ Outsiders & Intuits (2009) "Rosemarie Koczy"
- ^ Wiseman, C., (2007) The Place for the Arts: The MacDowell Colony, 1907 - 2007, MacDowell, New Hampshire. ISBN 1-58465-609-3
- ^ a b Miyawaki, Y. et al. (2009) "Rosemarie Koczy: The Shroud Weaver", Galerie Miyawaki, Kyoto. ISBN 978-4-9902435-2-4
- ^ "Artist Rosemarie Koczy allegedly faked her Holocaust survivor's story - Arts - 08.13.2017". DW.COM. 2017-11-13. Retrieved 2017-11-13.
- ^ https://www.nytimes.com/2017/11/15/arts/design/rosemarie-koczy-holocaust.html
- ^ "Rosemarie Inge Koczy's Obituary on New York Times". New York Times. Retrieved 2018-01-25.
- ^ "Five Artists Awarded Greenburger Prize", The New York Times, Arts Section, May 1, 1986
- ^ Musée Création Franche: Exhibition Catalogues
- ^ Art as a witness: QCC Art Gallery exhibit of Rosemarie Koczy's works, 2014
- ^ Callis, Marion M., (2013) Rosemarie Koczy: art as witness, QCC Art Gallery, New York. ISBN 978-1-936658-22-0
- ^ a b Susanne Zander (1990) "Rosemarie Koczy", Galerie Susanne Zander, Koln