Against the backdrop of the Shoah and historical upheavals in Poland, Erna Rosenstein’s works bear witness to the resilience of an artist who never wavered in her political and artistic ideals. In a career spanning six decades, Rosenstein developed a multimedia creative cosmos that reveals how the present interweaves with memories of the past, and how collective and individual experiences are intertwined.
General Director Stella Rollig: Rosenstein’s works reject a culture of remembrance that regards history as a closed and single narrative. The artist instead sees memory as an open-ended process in which the past is repeatedly reordered. In this respect, her work also touches on pivotal issues in museum and academic practice: History never presents itself as a self-contained whole but rather as a fragile tapestry of traces, ruptures, and losses. Remembering therefore always involves a continuous process of questioning and reconstruction.
Rosenstein lived in Vienna for two years in the early 1930s where she studied at the Women’s Academy, joined a communist youth organization, and witnessed the 1934 February uprising firsthand. None of the artist’s works have survived from this period. They were lost or destroyed during the years of persecution in Nazi-occupied Poland.
After World War II, Rosenstein adopted an expressive visual language to articulate not only the collective experience of violence but also the question of complicity. She resisted the doctrine of Socialist Realism imposed during the Stalinist era in Poland and her art was instead guided by Surrealism and subjective experiences. One theme she kept revisiting over the decades was the brutal murder of her parents, which she explored as a form of remembering and processing. Rosenstein never abandoned figuration, even when biomorphic, abstract compositions began to characterize her visual language in the late 1950s.
Throughout her life, Rosenstein explored various forms of expression through painting, drawing, and assemblage, seeking different ways of capturing her experiences — including those beyond the limits of speech. Memory became an artistic principle in Rosenstein’s work. Both defining experiences from the past and fleeting moments in the present are etched into her multilayered visual worlds, said curator Stephanie Auer.
Enigmatic and poetic work titles create space to explore memory, trauma, and personal narratives while also reflecting how for Rosenstein — as a Painter and poet — word and image are closely intertwined. Her assemblages convey the poetry of the everyday, bringing together found, used, and discarded objects to form unexpected and sometimes ironic constellations.
The approximately eighty works in the exhibition in the Orangery at the Lower Belvedere — paintings, drawings, assemblages, and poems — tell of persecution and flight, loss and grief while at the same time conveying the artist’s resilience, artistic independence, and persistent pursuit of new forms of expression.