Documenta head leaves amid antisemitism scandal
July 16, 2022The director general of Documenta, one of Germany's most renowned exhibitions of modern art, resigned on Saturday amid an antisemitism scandal.
The shareholders and supervisory board mutually agreed to terminate Sabine Schormann's contract at short notice, a statement from the organization said.
Indonesian mural courts controversy
The decision follows an outcry about the imagery used in a large artwork by an Indonesian collective that had to be taken down just days after the exhibition — in the sleepy central German city of Kassel — opened in June.
The mural features a soldierlike figure depicted as a pig wearing a scarf with a Star of David and a helmet bearing the word "Mossad" — the name of Israel's national intelligence agency.
On the same picture, a man is depicted with sidelocks often associated with Orthodox Jews, fangs and bloodshot eyes, and wearing a black hat with the SS insignia.
Jewish leaders and Israel's embassy to Germany voiced "disgust" at the artwork and repeatedly called for Schormann to quit.
Documenta board express 'profound dismay'
In their statement Saturday, the supervisory board expressed "its profound dismay" about "clearly antisemitic" content which it said was a "clear transgression of borders."
Documenta said it would appoint an interim successor shortly.
Schormann had originally defended the piece, named "People's Justice," despite the international outcry, saying the exhibition's artistic directors were free to curate the show as they wished.
Schormann had moved to Kassel as general director in 2018, following another scandal at the nonprofit regarding a large financial deficit.
It resulted in art historian Annette Kulenkampf resigning from her post as director.
mm/kb (AFP, AP, dpa, EPD)