Josef Herman 1911-2000
studied at the Warsaw School of Art where he exhibited with a young group of left-wing artists called
The Phrygyan Bonnet. In 1938 anti-Semitism pogroms forced him to flee Warsaw for Brussels then
France and finally to the UK. He initially settled in Glasgow, where he lived from 1940 -1943 and
befriended Jankel Adler, another Polish refugee artist. Herman’s early work merged childhood
memories to present scenes of pre-War Warsaw, Jewish traditions and his family.
Upon moving to the small mining town of Ystradgynlais in South Wales in 1944, Herman’s style
shifted dramatically. He described how “Ystradgynlais changed my life and my work… Ystradgynlais
mattered”. The area provided a wealth of inspiration and gave Herman an understanding of the
hardships and warmth of community there – something which he so skilfully depicts in his drawings.
'From 1951, as I now see it, my drawing became more sculptural, the washes more controlled for that sculptural end, the
contrast stronger and the line lost all the remnants of “beauty”, a thing I did not regret. Beauty and I were in a long
lasting conflict but not until 1951 did I get the better of it.' Josef Herman
In Potato harvest of 1959 the weight of the figure is palpable. Differing from earlier works the body of
the figures are both sculptural and dense. The dark washes of ink and determined black lines of his
silhouette give the figure a substance that is typical of Herman’s more mature works. The drawing
elegantly achieves Herman’s overarching aim of capturing the “dignity of the ordinary and the
everyday”.
Herman has been featured in numerous group and solo exhibitions. During his lifetime large
retrospectives of his works were held at Whitechapel Gallery, London (1956), Auckland City art
Gallery, New Zealand (1956), National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne (1957), Camden Arts Centre,
London (1980), Royal Academy of Arts, London (1991), National Museum of Wales, Cardiff (1992) to
name but a few. His works are also held in many public collections such as The British Museum,
London, Manchester City Art Galleries, Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, Tate
Britain, London, Museum of Fine Arts, Montreal and National Gallery, Melbourne.
Provenance
The Roland family, UK (acquired directly from the artist July 1959)
Exhibitions
R.B.D., Josef Herman, Small Paintings and Drawings, 21 April - 21 May, 1960, cat. 56, p. 6
Arnolfini Gallery, Bristol, 3 - 30 March 1961, no. 7
Eton College, Windsor, 2 - 22 July 1961
Manchester City Art Gallery, Athenaeum Annexe, 20 June - 15 July 1962
Leeds City Art Gallery, 6 September - 7 October 1962
Aberdeen Art Gallery, 27 October - 18 December 1962
Rumbold Gallery, Midhurst, 31 December 1962 - 25 January 1963
Glynn Vivian Art Gallery, Swansea, Josef Herman Exhibtion, 6 - 27 April 1963, cat. 46
Marlborough College, Josef Herman Exhibition, 29 June - 14 July 1963, no.24
Preston's Art Gallery, Bolton, 6 - 24 October 1964, cat. 43
Middlesborough Art Gallery, 50 Drawings by Josef Herman, 8 – 29 May 1965, cat.32, toured to
Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle, 5 - 29 June 1965; Abbot Hall Art Gallery, Kendal, 3 - 24 July 1965;
Sunderland Art Gallery, 31 July - 28 August 1965; Darlington Art Gallery 4 - 25 September 1965; The
Minories, Colchester, 2 - 23 October 1965; Ben Uri Art Gallery, London, 16 November - 7 December1965; Towner Art Gallery, Eastbourne, 18 December 1965 - 23 January 1966; Willmer House Museum,
Farnham, 6 March - 2 April 1966
Glasgow Art Gallery and Museum, Josef Herman, Retrospective, 30 May - 6 July 1975, cat. 54, toured to
Scottish Arts Council Gallery, Edinburgh, 19 July - 10th August 1975, cat. 54; National Museum of
Wales, Cardiff, 23 August - 22 September 1975
West Surrey College of Art and Design, Farnham, Josef Herman, 13 - 28 January 1978
Bury St. Edmunds Art Gallery, 3 May - 7 June 1976
The Jewish Museum, New York, The Immigrant Generations - Jewish Artists in Britain 1900 - 1945, 24 May -
25 September 1983, cat. 59
Literature
Fifty Herman Drawings from the Roland Collection, Graphis Press, London, 1974