Vienna Jewish printmaker known from 3 examples. Said to have possibly escaped Nazi Germany with the help of rich and influential Vienna friends (read in Vol. I) but was never heard of again. One of her prints (below) is dated 1906. The location of church above is still to be discovered. She was born in Mikolow (Nikolsburg) Moravia which had a rich Jewish community and just 5 miles across the Austrian border.
gerbrandcaspers@icloud.com
Paul, Rosa (Schweinfurt 12-03-1884 – 21-01-1936 Schweinfurt)
Printmaker and possibly painter. Living and working in Schweinfurt, possibly unmarried artist. She visited Martha Cunz (1876-1961) in Sankt Gallen (Sw.) to study for three months from Jan./Febr. 1908 and in April 1909. She left 4 prints of very great quality in the personal collection of Martha Cunz, the only 4 examples of her work. One of them shows the newly, 1907, (re)build “Feuerwachturm” (fire watch) overlooking the medieval city of Schweinfurt at Roßmarkt, a print showing 5 ducks very similar in execution to a print by Helene Tüpke-Grande, 2 Turkey’s in the style of Walter Klemm and a spring landscape with flowering trees (à la Helene Mass or Hedwig Matthiessen).
Dresslers KHB 1921 & 1930: Schweinfurt, Roßmarkt 1.
Dear print lover, passing-by visitor and reader:
While this new gallery-museum site is under construction (being build-up, stocked and arranged) priority must be given to first add all the represented artists in the index with works from the collection and if possible with the examples from the archives.
During construction the site is open to visitors, questions, feedback and suggestions.
Gerrie
gerbrandcaspers@icloud.com
Walli (“Frau Wulli”) Peretz-Brutzkus (Bruskus)
(Moscow 01-10-1884 - possibly in Belarus/Russia 1942)
Painter, printmaker and sculptor, said to have come to Germany from Russia (Moscow) in 1918.
Studied under Franz Skarbina (1849-1910) (who taught anatomical drawing in Berlin “Kunstgewerbemuseum”) and under classical historian Otto Seeck* (1850-1921). She is known by half a dozen woodblock prints, showing floral still life (bouquets in vases): Sunflowers (found in France), Physalis (Chinese lantern) and Anemones, Tulips and Red Berries, prints executed in a modernist style. In the Berlin “Graphotek” collection a print is kept titled “Bauernhaus”. It is probably is showing a Russian farm is and is described as a hand coloured etching but could be another woodblock print. She is most probably named after her grandmother Valeria in Polangen (Memel). Valeria is mentioned in a 1914 Article in the American Jewish Newspaper “The Advocate” by (her brother) Boris Brutzkus in an article concerning Romania (page 855).
Married to Ignatz Peretz mentioned in “Jüdisches Addressbuch 1930/31” at the same address as Wallie Peretz-Bruskus in Dressler KHB 1930./
A copy of the “Chinese Lantern” print is known with a label from the Cleveland Ohio (America) “Sterling & Welch Co”. This posh warehouse, famous for the worlds largest indoor Christmas tree and housing the worlds finest home furnishing stores in the world, could have been the location of a (travelling) exhibition with German graphic artists in which she took part or an art gallery representing Walli Peretz.
“Walli” is the German equivalent for the name Valeria, “Valya” the Russian equivalent. The flower prints are all signed “Walli Peretz”.
Exhibited in 1925 Berlin “Juryfreie Kunstschau” in the “Lehrer Bahnhof Landesausstellungs-gebäude” with two works: no. 978 “Araberin” and
No. 979 “Araber A.”.
In the same 1927 exhibition with No. 735 “Alt Jerusalem and No. 736 “Jordan”
In “Zeitschrift Heimat”, No. 8; 17 November 1927 Walli Peretz appeared in colour on the title page and probably with an article and interview..
* Otto Seeck is known for his 6 volume: “Geschichte des Untergangs der antiken Welt” (History of the Decline of the Ancient World).
Dresslers KHB. 1930: “Frau Wulli Peretz-Bruskus”: Berlin NO, Greifswalderstraße 89a. Member RvbK.
Jüdisches Adressbuch 1930/31: NO 55, Greifswalderstrasse 89a: Ignatz Peretz.
Read more about Walli’s extensive family in “Das Haus der Frau” Vol. 1.