Mindy Wiesel
Art Works
Artist Statement
Weisel is an artist born in Bergen-Belsen Displaced Persons camp after the war. The artist lives in Washington, D.C. Her work suggests personal reflections through abstraction and some solitude.
"My parents are survivors of the Auschwitz concentration camp. I was born in 1947 in Bergen-Belsen, Germany, in a displaced persons camp after the war. While growing up, I was told stories not only of the horrors of Nazi Germany and what my parents endured, but also of the beauty of their lives before the war. These paintings deal with the destruction of beauty as well as hope and survival. The numbers 'A3146' are those on my father's arm from the camps; the color blue, my mother's favorite color, expresses the beauty and spirituality I was raised with."
Teaching Applications
Questions:
- Can abstraction be a way to deal with the Holocaust?
- What images strike you in these works?
- If the paintings are abstract, what makes them related to the Holocaust?
- What did Primo Levi mean by "the drowned and the saved?"
- Why does the artist have a suitcase as part of her work?
- Does the artist raise theological questions which lurk in the minds of survivors after the Holocaust?






