Mary Costanza collection

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/instantiations/us-005578-irn35445-eng-irn35445_eng an entity of type: Instantiation

Mary Costanza collection 
Mary Costanza's compassionate interest in the suffering and welfare of humankind often determined the subjects of her paintings. Social commentary became the thrust of her life and art. Early in her artistic career, Costanza's work was dominated by images of mothers and children. She continued to explore this theme for decades, often in the harrowing images of mothers and children in World War II concentration camps. Mary Costanza made her first paintings of the Holocaust while she was a college student at Temple University and met some survivors of concentration camps. She grew increasingly preoccupied with events of WWII during the 1970s and the atrocities began appearing more frequently in her work. She continued to paint these images well into the 1980s. During this period, she was also teaching a course on the art of the Holocaust and working on a book"Living Witness: The Art of the Concentrations Camps" She and husband John traveled to eastern Europe, Israel and across the U.S. to seek information about artists who had lived and created works of art while prisoners of war. The publishing of her book led to several nationally televised interviews. She continued to write, speak and paint through the 1990s. Toward the end of her life, she returned to the theme of mother and child, representing her hope for the future. Her last painting, created just six months before her death in 2000, returns to a tender image of love and compassion. 
Mary Costanza collection 

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