Leo Haas

1901–1983

The Slovak artist Leo Haas created numerous drawings documenting life under Nazi oppression during World War II. Hass trained at German art academies in Karlsruhe and Berlin and worked as an illustrator and caricaturist in Vienna before returning to Czechoslovakia to open his own atelier. Soon after, in 1939 Haas was deported to the labor camp in Nisko and a few years later to Terezín, where he made clandestine drawings of the realities of the Holocaust. Upon the discovery of his drawings, Haas was sent to Auschwitz, Sachsenhausen, and Mauthausen, where he continued his subversive work. In 1955 Haas moved to East Berlin, where he worked as a set designer for the state film and television companies.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Figures in the Nisko Camp, Poland

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As a prisoner in the Nisko labor camp in Poland in 1939 and 1940, Leo Haas painted portraits of SS men in exchange for extra food rations and art supplies. He also documented the daily lives of…