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#Fritz Heinle
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Fritz Henle, Diamond Rock, 1956.
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scribbleanalysis · 1 year
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Walter Benjamin (played by Quim Lecina) drawing Fritz Heinle in “La última frontera” (dir. Manuel Cussó-Ferrer, 1992) 
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semioticapocalypse · 3 years
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Fritz Heinle. Frida Kahlo in her studio. Coyoacan, c.1943
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gabriel-sabo · 2 years
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smallexit · 11 years
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The gray Elysium of the imagination is, for the artist, the cloud in which he rests and the wall of cloud on the horizon of his visions. This wall opens up for children, and more brightly colored walls can be glimpsed behind it. Motto: A soft green glow in the evening red. --Fritz Heinle
Walter Benjamin, 'Notes for a Study of the Beauty of Colored Illustrations in Children's Books' in Walter Benjamin: Selected Writings Vo.1.
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scribbleanalysis · 4 years
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This recording was taken on 10 February 2020 at the home of Leda Drucaroff and Sasha Schoen. They are both reading six poems by Fritz Heinle, which were set to voice and piano by Sasha’s father, Ernst Schoen in 1932, which you can hear here. The poems were translated by Sasha for the first time into English. An essay on the songs, by Sabine Schiller-Lerg, can be found here
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This photograph is thought to be of Heinle, taken before his death in 1914. I would like to think more about the photograph he appears to be looking at
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scribbleanalysis · 4 years
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Darcy Buerkle, in her book Nothing Happened: Charlotte Salomon and an Archive of Suicide (2012), places Salomon’s ‎Leben? oder Theater? in the context of the cultures of suicide at the start of the twentieth century: among, specifically, Jewish women, such as Ricka Seligson, who gassed herself in August 1914, along with Fritz Heinle. A lecture by Buerkle is available here. 
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