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Hans Feibusch


Hans Feibusch (15 August 1898 – 18 July 1998) was a German painter and sculptor of Jewish heritage who lived and worked in Britain from 1933 until his death. He is best known for his murals, particularly in Anglican churches. In all he worked in thirty Anglican churches (28 as a muralist, and two—including Ely Cathedral—as sculptor only) and produced what is probably the largest body of work in his particular métier by any artist in the history of the Church of England.

Feibusch was born in Frankfurt am Main, Germany to Jewish parents. His father was a dental surgeon and his mother was an amateur painter. He served with the German Army on the Russian front during the First World War, from 1916–18.

After the war he studied art in Munich. Subsequently he worked under Karl Hofer at the Berlin University of the Arts, and then in Paris with Andre Lhote. He returned to Frankfurt in 1925 to work as an artist, with a studio in the former alongside Rudolf Heinisch and Benno Elkan. He was awarded a prize by the Prussian Academy of Arts in 1931 for his painting The Fishmonger.

After the Nazi party came to power, he emigrated to England in 1933. His works were subsequently exhibited in the 1937 exhibition of Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art). Feibusch was one of a minority of artists included whose work was relatively conservative, and he was probably included for his Jewish heritage. His works in that exhibition, now lost, were two paintings of angels. His work Zwei schwebende Figuren ("Two floating figures"), confiscated from the Städtischen Galerie in Frankfurt, was displayed with works by Jankel Adler and Marc Chagall as part of the exhibition entitled "Offenbarung der jüdischen Rassenseele gezeigt" ("Revelation of the Jewish racial soul")


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