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Arthur Szyk Symposium: Keynote Address, “Depicting Evil: Arthur Szyk’s Anti-Nazi Caricatures”
October 4, 2023 @ 5:00 pm - 6:00 pm
FreeJoin us for the keynote address of the symposium: Arthur Szyk: Art – Propaganda – Memory, celebrating the art and legacy of Arthur Szyk!
Join us in the Aloysius P. Kelley Center’s Presentation Room (or virtually) for the Szyk Symposium keynote lecture, Depicting Evil: Arthur Szyk’s Anti-Nazi Caricatures, by Steven Luckert, PhD. Luckert is the Senior Program Curator at the Levine Institute for Holocaust Education at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
We invite you to join the conversation via the following options:
- In-person in the Aloysius P. Kelley Center‘s Presentation Room on the Fairfield University campus (registration required-limited seating!)
- Streaming via thequicklive.com
Please register here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/szyk-symposium-keynote-address-arthur-szyks-anti-nazi-caricatures-tickets-622714705447
The symposium will continue on October 5, starting at 9 a.m., in the Barone Campus Center’s Dogwood Room and streaming on thequicklive.com. Leading scholars and curators from across the country will present their perspectives on Szyk’s impact on art, politics, and culture. Speakers include Glenn Dynner, PhD; Samuel D. Gruber, PhD, Wendy Lower, PhD; Jonathan Petropoulos, PhD; Gavriel Rosenfeld, PhD; Ori Z. Soltes, PhD; Francesco Spagnolo, PhD; and Ellen M. Umansky, PhD.
This symposium is presented in conjunction with the exhibition In Real Times. Arthur Szyk: Artist and Soldier for Human Rights, on view in the Bellarmine Hall Galleries from September 29-December 16, 2023.
Don’t miss Szyk: The Interactive Experience in the Walsh Gallery in the Quick Center for the Arts.
About the exhibition:
This special exhibition, organized around the theme of human rights features more than 50 works by acclaimed Polish Jewish miniaturist and political cartoonist Arthur Szyk (1894-1951), including political cartoons, and images that honor the power and importance of democratic ideals. A witness to the rise of totalitarianism in Europe, Szyk emigrated from London to America at the beginning of World War II. He lived and worked in Connecticut, and passed away in New Canaan in 1951. His powerful political cartoons animated the covers of magazines such as Time and Collier’s, raising awareness of the plight of European Jews and helping sway public opinion toward support for American participation in the Second World War. As a self-described “soldier in art,” Szyk’s work was acclaimed by First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt as a potent weapon “against Hitlerism.” He advocated for religious tolerance, racial equality, and human dignity. Active in the years leading up to World War II and during the Holocaust, Szyk became one of America’s most celebrated political artists for his powerful artistic and social contributions against Nazism and fascism. As our communities continue to confront issues of structural racism and social upheaval — including the sharp rise in antisemitic rhetoric and violence across the United States— this exhibition provides a platform for conversations on the urgent topics of human rights and social justice.
https://www.fairfield.edu/museum/szyk/
Image: Arthur Szyk, detail of “I Need Peace Now!! I must prepare for the third round…”, 1944, watercolor and gouache on paper, Taube Family Arthur Szyk Collection, The Magnes Collection of Jewish Art and Life, University of California, Berkeley.