Roger Loewig
Biographical Sketch
The painter and poet Roger Loewig was born in 1930 in Silesia. He lived through the
beginning of World War II and
the occupation of Poland as a child in the city of Oels, Lower Silesia. Shortly before the end of
the war, he was drafted
into service digging anti-tank ditches in the Warthe Marshes near Lodz. Still nearly a child, only
16, he was traumatized
by the horrors experienced during the war and the disclosure of the war atrocities. He began
living on the road in the
countryside, leaving behind irregular school attendance and an attempt to take up studies which
was thwarted by a
limited residency permit and lack of school documents. Loewig began writing, painting and
drawing. He taught at
schools in East Berlin from 1954 to 1964.
1965: first lithographs; 1966: joined the german Fine Arts Association (in former East
germany), freelance painter and
graphic artist. 1967: requested an exit visa. 1972: permission granted, he moved to West Berlin.
1973: trip through
Europe, guest at the Villa Massimo in Rome. 1976: began to work on etchings, stipendium from
the Aldgrever-Gesellschaft. Goya Medaille from the city of Antony. 1981: honorably granted
the Lovis Corinth Award. 1986: gift of
10 works to the National Museum in Warsaw. His prints and drawings constitute his most
important works to the
present. The themes always center on the fragile existence of humanity, grief and mourning, the
horrors of war, the
Holocaust and life as a fugitive. The landscapes of his childhood constitute the common
visionary backgrounds of his
works. Migrating birds and Icarus became existential signs, the trees along the burned horizon
represented the struggle
of his subconscious. Parallel to his graphic series, he produced poetry cycles and lyrical texts
such as 'Zugvogeldasein'
(The Life of a Migratory Bird) and 'Dunkelland' (Dark Land). ek
(*)
References:
Roger Loewig. Handzeichnungen 1954-1980. Edited by Werner Timm, Propyläen
Verlag 1981;
Roger Loewig. Zeichnungen und Lithographien. Catalogue, Berlinische Galerie 1988;
Roger Loewig. Catalogue, National Museum in Warsaw 1986
(*)
Note:
The references given are not meant as a list of the best works available on the subject, but
simply reflect the author's
sources.
Registers and catalogues of works are included when known and correspond to the
information given in the index.
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