Konstnären med katt i famnen
Lotte Laserstein, Self Portrait with Cat, 1928 Leicester Museums & Galleries Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet. ©Leicester Museums & Galleries/Bridgeman Images/TT Bildupphovsrätt 2023

Lotte Laserstein — A Divided Life

Malmö, 6.5 2023 – 1.10 2023

The ground-breaking German-Swedish artist Lotte Laserstein (1898–1993) is one of the art world’s most exciting recent rediscoveries. “A Divided Life”, which is on view in the museum’s great Turbine Hall, is the largest exhibition of Laserstein’s work to date in the Nordic Region.

Exhibitions in Berlin, Frankfurt, and Kiel have attracted broad audiences eager to explore this long-forgotten artist and have established a place for her in the history of twentieth-century art. However, these shows focused primarily on Laserstein’s work from the 1920s to the beginning of the 1930s—the period before she was forced to leave Germany and emigrated to Sweden. “A Divided Life” focuses as much on the multifaceted works she created in exile in Sweden as it does on those she made before leaving Germany.

Lotte Laserstein’s career as an artist began in Berlin in the 1920s. After graduating from the Academy of Arts there in 1927—as one of the first women to earn a degree—she quickly succeeded in making a name for herself in the city’s art scene. Laserstein captured the spirit of an era in scenes from her studio and portraits of cosmopolitan, emancipated women. At first glance, her work appears to share some of the characteristics of the movement known as the New Objectivity. But Laserstein did not exaggerate or caricature—instead, her work reveals an intimate realism that weaves together painting tradition with contemporary themes. The paintings she executed in Berlin, in which she depicts her life as an artist and shows us the many sides of the Weimar Republic’s modern “new woman,” are surprisingly current even today, particularly in light of the ongoing discussions around gender identity and queerness.

The success predicted for Lotte Laserstein and ascribed to her by German art critics in the 1920s ended abruptly in 1933 when the Nazis seized power. As a Jew, Laserstein was increasingly excluded from the public art world. Thanks to an invitation to show her work at the Galerie Moderne in Stockholm in 1937, she was able to get out of Germany with some of her most important works and come to Sweden, where she would spend the greater part of her working life. In Sweden, Laserstein was able to build a new life for herself as a portrait and landscape painter.

“For five decades, Laserstein produced an extremely comprehensive, thematic, and stylistically multifaceted collection of works that has only partially come to light in earlier shows,” say the exhibition’s curators, Iris Müller-Westermann and Anna-Carola Krausse.
“In our exhibition, we ascribe to this period of Laserstein’s life and work the same status as the time she lived in Berlin. Through her representational commissioned portraits, expressive self-portraits, moving depictions of other emigrants, and landscapes and urban scenes, it is possible to discern what living in exile was like. Laserstein’s Swedish work raises questions about what it means to lose one’s own cultural and social milieu and be forced to establish roots in a new society. Against the backdrop of today’s global migration patterns, the works Laserstein created while in exile in Sweden provide an important contribution to the ongoing dialogue around these issues.”

Although Laserstein was able to complete a great many important portraits on commission—for clients that included well-known aristocrats, politicians, business leaders, and cultural figures—and although she was still able to make a living as an artist, her recognition in the Swedish art scene remained limited. It is likely that her unwavering commitment to realism during post-war decades dominated by abstraction played a role in preventing her from receiving a larger breakthrough in Sweden.

Lotte Laserstein described her life and her career with the words “My rescue to Sweden broke my life in two.” This division has shaped the structure of the exhibition. The first part is devoted to the artist’s time in Berlin, with key works that illuminate her artistic beginnings and early successes in the Weimar Republic. The second part features Laserstein’s years in Sweden.

“Lotte Laserstein: A Divided Life” will be on view at Moderna Museet Malmö from May 6 through October 1, 2023. The exhibition will then move on to Moderna Museet in Stockholm from November 11 through April 14, 2024.

Curators: Iris Müller-Westermann, formerly Museum Director of Moderna Museet Malmö and now Senior Curator at Moderna Museet in Stockholm and Anna-Carola Krausse, an art historian and Laserstein expert based in Berlin.

Support for this exhibition is provided by Mannheimer Swartling, the Barbro Osher Pro Suecia Foundation, and the Jacob Wallenberg Foundation. We thank also the Lotte Laserstein Exhibition Circle.

For more information, please contact: Alexandra Giertz, Communication Manager
mob: 0734-228739
press.malmo@modernamuseet.se

Press preview at both Moderna Museet Malmö and Malmö Konstmuseum on Thursday, 4 May

On 4 May, Moderna Museet and Malmö Konstmuseum are inviting members of the press to a preview for the two upcoming exhibitions. The press event begins at Moderna Museet with a preview of the exhibition “Lotte Laserstein: A Divided Life” and continues later at Malmö Konstmuseum with a preview of the exhibition “Tal R & Mamma Andersson – Around Hill”. Transportation between the museums will be offered to journalists who wish to attend both presentations.

At 10.00 – Press preview at Moderna Museet Malmö for the exhibition “Lotte Laserstein – A Divided Life” attended by curators Dr. Iris Müller-Westermann and Dr. Anna Carola Krausse and by Museum Director Elisabeth Millqvist.

At 11.30 – Transport to Malmö Art Museum.

At 12.00 – Press preview at Malmö Konstmuseum for the exhibition in the presence of the artists Karin Mamma Andersson, Tal R. Museum Director Kirse Junge-Stevnsborg, and curator Marcus Pompeius will be in attendance.

Applications for admission to the press preview must be submitted no later than 2 May to Alexandra Giertz at a.giertz@modernamuseet.se or Disa Torbjörnsdottir (Malmö Art Museum) at disa.torbjornsdottir@malmo.se.

Indicate whether you wish to attend both press previews or only one of them and whether you would like transportation from Moderna Museet Malmö to Malmö Konstmuseum. The press preview is for journalists or writers who have been assigned to report on the exhibitions. We request that you indicate in which newspaper or other media organization you write for.

Konstnären med katt i famnen
Lotte Laserstein, Self Portrait with Cat, 1928 Leicester Museums & Galleries Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet. ©Leicester Museums & Galleries/Bridgeman Images/TT Bildupphovsrätt 2023
portrait of woman face
Lotte Laserstein, Russian Girl, ca 1928 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet
©Lotte Laserstein Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of nude model and artist in front of a mirror
Lotte Laserstein, At the Mirror, 1930/31 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein Courtesy of Agnews, London Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of woman and two children in background
Lotte Laserstein, Thines Ahlcrona-Ohlsén, 1939 Photo: Helene Toresdotter © Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of woman painting at easel
Lotte Laserstein, Self-Portrait at the Easel, 1938 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin ©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of woman with buildings in background
Lotte Laserstein, Self Portrait in the Studio on Friedrichsruher Straße, 1927 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin ©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painted self portrait of woman
Lotte Laserstein, Self Portrait before “Evening over Potsdam”, 1950 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of girl with compact
Lotte Laserstein, Russian Girl with Compact, 1928 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of woman with umbrella
Lotte Laserstein, Nora Bigner, 1938 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting with two women
Lotte Laserstein, The Painter and Madeleine at the Easel, 1947 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting with male face
Lotte Laserstein, Mongolian, 1927 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting with artist and model
Lotte Laserstein, I and My Model, 1929/30 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet. Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein Courtesy of Agnews, London
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of artist and nude model
Lotte Laserstein, In My Studio, 1928 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of sitting man
Lotte Laserstein, The Émigré, Dr. Walter Lindenthal, 1941 Photo: Helene Toresdotter/Malmö Konstmuseum ©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of sitting woman in fur coat
Lotte Laserstein, Lady in a Fur Coat (The Gallerist Signe Schultz), 1941 Photo: Michelangelo Miskulin
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting of two boys
Lotte Laserstein, The Brothers Gedin, 1942 Photo: Albin Dahlström/Moderna Museet
©Lotte Laserstein
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting with three children
Lotte Laserstein, Children with Handcart, 1932 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein Courtesy Daxer&Marschall, München
Bildupphovsrätt 2023
painting with five persons
Lotte Laserstein, Evening Conversation, 1948 Photo: Lotte Laserstein Archiv Krausse, Berlin
©Lotte Laserstein

Bildupphovsrätt 2023
two women standing in front of a painting
Lotte Laserstein, The curators Iris Müller-Westermann and Anna-Carola Krausse, 2023 Photo: Helene Toresdotter/Moderna Museet Bildupphovsrätt 2023