2021
DOI: 10.1017/s0960777321000138
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European Fantasies: Modernism and Jewish Absence at the Venice Biennale of Art, 1948–1956

Abstract: This article examines how states with a fascist past – Germany, Austria and Italy – used modernism in the visual arts to rebrand national and European culture at the Venice Biennale of Art after 1945. I argue that post-war exhibitions of modern art, including those at the Biennale, reveal a vast confrontation with Jewish absence after the Holocaust. Christian Democrats and proponents of European integration attempted to reimagine modernism without the Jewish minority that had shaped it in crucial ways. Meanwhi… Show more

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