Art Spiegelman's Maus is a famous cartoon book that won the Pulitzer Prize. This book was published in 1986, Volume 1: "The History of My Father's Bloody", Volume 2, Volume 2: "My problem begins here" published in 1991. It was later integrated into the volume. The book tells Spiegelman to write about his father's experience and experience itself during the Holocaust. There have been plenty of massacre books for decades, but the mouse differs in every book. After reading a lot of books in the Holocaust, most people know about this tragic event, so they become duplicates.
In addition to the problems of public space, your excursion can take you to many different places. Every place has its own story and rhythm. Consider the four museums of American history museum, Holocaust museum, aviation museum, museum. Each of these museums speaks very differently and they can tell it in a very different way. Museums can organize collections by theme (Impressionists, Modernism, Renaissance etc), say that one object is connected to another object, or one object is connected to another object Almost not. So how do the students understand what they saw or remember the artwork after leaving the museum?
The art of massacre and the art of genocide are two different art forms. The former is art that draws and suggests the Holocaust. It includes works created during the war and after the war, victims and people not directly threatened by this incident. Although the art of the Holocaust was limited to works created by the victims between 1939 and 1945. The most important thing about Holocaust art is the ability to reflect that subject in the subject and the content revealed by that artist himself. And the conditions they work. People suffering from the harshest environments run the risk of creating art in their lives. Art is the reason for their lives, they use their talent to survive
No matter what kind of artist trying to solve this tragedy, regardless of the way they actually experienced the Holocaust. Commemorative sculpture by George Siegel, the Holocaust is just a remarkable example. The visual art corresponding to the Holocaust includes paintings by Holocaust refugees Marc Chagall and George Gross, and illustrations of surviving son's art Spiegelman (mouse) (published in 1980-85). The famous musical reaction to the Holocaust included the Warsaw A survivor of Arnold Schonberg (the first premiere in 1947) and the 13th symphony of Dmitry Shostakovich (the first premiere of 1962) Yevgeny Yevtushenko's poem " Baby Yar "(1961), composer Charles Davidson, Michael Horvits, Oscar Moraz