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Ausschnitt der illustrierten Titelseite des London Diary von Lili Cassel. Ein zeichnendes Mädchen sitzt zwischen Wolken vermutlich auf einem Sperrballon zur Abwehr von Luftangriffen. Die Illustrationen sind mit Tusche und Wasserfarben gemalt.

Hans Günter Flieg (1923–2024) – in memoriam

Photographer Hans Günter Flieg died in São Paulo, Brazil, on 4 September 2024 aged 101.

Hans Günter Flieg, cousin of writer Stefan Heym, was born into a Jewish family in Chemnitz. He and his family emigrated from Nazi Germany to São Paulo shortly before war broke out. He had just completed a course of training with the photographer of the Jewish Museum in Berlin. After arriving in Brazil, his parents founded the machine embroidery company Bordados Flieg, for which his younger brother also worked. Hans Günter Flieg, on the other hand, decided to build on his photography training. He trained as a lithographer and worked as an industrial and commercial photographer, founding his own studio in 1945.

As a freelance photographer, he worked for many companies; his photographs were published in newspapers and calendars. In 1951, he was the official photographer at the first International Biennial in São Paulo. He recorded the development of São Paulo in more than 35,000 photos. His work was shown at numerous exhibitions and won multiple awards.

Hans Günter Flieg's first links with the German Exile Archive 1933–1945 were forged in connection with the exhibition "… mehr vorwärts als rückwärts schauen…" Das deutschsprachige Exil in Brasilien (2013), developed in cooperation with Marlen Eckl. We had the privilege of visiting him at his apartment in São Paulo. Hans Günter Flieg was also enthusiastic about our cooperative network project "Arts in Exile". In 2013, he gave an interview – also in his apartment in São Paulo – for the special exhibition "Voices of Exile", a collaboration with Jochanan Shelliem.

Some of his impressive photographs are also part of the virtual museum "Arts in Exile", e.g. the photo strip "Last photograph taken in Chemnitz and first photograph in São Paulo". "The story of this film is the story of the black stripe between the two photos," Hans Günter Flieg said to us in an interview. Behind the black stripe that separates the two images lies the story of his emigration from Nazi Germany to Brazil. The black stripe tells of taking leave – the last look out of the window of the family's apartment in Chemnitz – and arriving in exile, where Hans Günter Flieg chose a vase of flowers as his first subject. His memories of what happened between the two pictures were astonishingly detailed.

In Hans Günter Flieg, we have lost one of the last contemporary witnesses of exile from the Nazi regime. A remarkable, fascinating man with a tremendous wealth of knowledge and great artistic flair, even though he referred to himself as a "technician". We are grateful to have met Hans Günter Flieg and will not forget him.

(Dr. Sylvia Asmus)

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Content

  1. Ruth Weiss (1924 – 2025) – In memoriam
  2. Dr. Vincent C. Frank Steiner (1930–2025) – In memoriam
  3. Hans Günter Flieg (1923–2024) – in memoriam
  4. Dr. Ruth K. Westheimer (1928–2024) – in memoriam
  5. Guy Stern (1922–2023) – in memoriam
  6. Trude Simonsohn (1921-2022) – in memoriam
  7. “Child Emigration from Frankfurt am Main. Stories of rescue, loss and remembrance”
  8. Questionnaires as a source for researching German-speaking exile – using Alfred Kantorowicz as an example
  9. Professor Dr. John M. Spalek (1928-2021) in memoriam
  10. Lieselotte Maas (1937-2020) – In memoriam
  11. Ruth Klüger (1931-2020) – in memoriam
  12. "What should I cook?" Recipes from the German Exile Archive 1933-1945
  13. Hellmut Stern (1928-2020) - In memoriam
  14. Thomas Mann: German listeners! – listening station on the topic of exile outside our Frankfurt building
  15. Publication of exhibition catalogue “Exile. Experience and Testimony”
  16. Focusing on the topic of exile – the history magazine "Damals" ("Yesteryear") is published in collaboration with the German Exile Archive 1933–1945
  17. Dora Schindel (1915–2018) – In memoriam
  18. Werner Berthold (1921–2017) – In memoriam
  19. Rolf Kralovitz (1925 - 2015) – In memoriam
  20. Buddy Elias – In memoriam
  21. Arts in Exile – virtual exhibition and network
  22. Brigitte Kralovitz-Meckauer (1925–2014) – in memoriam
  23. Ludwig Werner Kahn - 100th birthday
  24. Goethe Medal and honorary membership of the Gesellschaft für Exilforschung e.V. awarded to Professor John M. Spalek
  25. "Nestor of German finance" - Fritz Neumark's 110th birthday
  26. Book donation for the German National Library
  27. "A prisoner of Stalin and Hitler" - 20 years since the death of Margarete Buber-Neumann
  28. The founder of futurology – the 100th birthday of Ossip K. Flechtheim
  29. On the death of lyricist Emma Kann
  30. Nestor of exile research 1933–1945 in the USA - the 80th birthday of Prof. Dr. John M. Spalek
  31. Pre-mortem legacy of politologist John G. Stoessinger in the German Exile Archive 1933-1945
  32. Lili Cassel Wronker: A London Diary, 1939-1940
  33. Chronicler of her century – 90th birthday of Anja Lundholm
  34. Reichsausbürgerungskartei
  35. Hans Gustav Güterbock
  36. Geneviève Pitot: The Mauritian-Shekel

Last changes: 11.09.2025

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