WŁODZIMIERZ SIWIERSKI
Born
September 19, 1905 in Brzeziny, Poland; died October 19, 1984 in Warsaw, Poland
Background
1919-23
Siwierski studied in Moscow and 1929-33, he attended the Sorbonne in Paris.
After 1933, he lived in Warsaw and worked as an artist, painting portraits,
still lifes, and landscapes.
Arrest and Deportation to Auschwitz
Siwierski
was arrested in Warsaw on September 14, 1940, and sent to Pawiak prison. September 20, 1940, he was deported to Auschwitz,
where he received prisoner number 4629.
Work Assignments at Auschwitz
Siwierski
was initially assigned to hard labor and was later transferred to the carpentry
shop, where he produced toys, ornaments, and wood sculptures. An SS
commission visiting Auschwitz in June 1941 selected some of his sculptures for
inclusion in the Museum of Penology in Berlin.
Art Produced at Auschwitz
1942 he replaced
fellow artist and prisoner Xawery Dunikowski working on a model of Auschwitz.
Siwierski also completed about 200 drawings of camp life.
Release from Auschwitz and
After
March 1942,
he was released from the camp, smuggling out some of his drawings by taping
them to his body. Following his release,
Siwierski illustrated several underground publications, despite the fact that
he periodically had to report to the Gestapo. After the war, he lived in Warsaw, working
as a painter, architect, and interior designer.
Bibliography:
Archives at
the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in Oświęcim.
Jaworska,
Janina. Nie wszystek umrę... Warsaw, 1975.
Milton,
Sybil and Janet Blatter. Art of the Holocaust. New York, 1981.