Inge Jaehner

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Inge Jaehner (born February 12, 1956 in Osnabrück ; † March 13, 2016 in Ostercappeln ) was a German art historian and director of the Felix Nussbaum House in Osnabrück from 2000 to 2016 . A number of her publications have appeared under her maiden name Inge Frankmöller .

Life

Jaehner finished her art studies at the University of Osnabrück with Franz-Joachim Verspohl with a Magister Artium in 1984. She volunteered at the Museums- und Kunstverein eV Osnabrück and curated exhibition projects in the fields of art and architecture. Since 1987, Jaehner has been responsible for art in the cultural history museum of the city of Osnabrück and from 1995 also took over the scientific supervision of the Felix Nussbaum collection .

She was married to Jürgen Jaehner and lived in Ostercappeln near Osnabrück. Inge Jaehner died on March 13, 2016, shortly after her official departure from the museum office.

Director of the Felix-Nussbaum-Haus Osnabrück

From 2000 to 2016, the management of the Museum of Cultural History / Felix-Nussbaum-Haus (since 2017 Museum Quarter Osnabrück) was run as a dual leadership. As director of the Felix-Nussbaum-Haus Inge Jaehner increased the level of awareness of Nussbaum's works and promoted his international recognition as a painter through exhibitions. Inge Jaehner conceived a series of exhibitions on the topic of "Art and Exile" and organized corresponding art exhibitions, e. B. 2004 “Time in Sight” or 2009 “Hidden Trace”. She brought works by famous representatives of modernism to Osnabrück, by Mark Rothko , Max Beckmann and Paul Klee , and put them in a visual dialogue with works by Nussbaum. The presentation planned for 2014 about the art collection of Erich Maria Remarque , who was born in Osnabrück, could not be implemented due to Inge Jaehner's serious illness. On January 28, 2016 her official farewell from the Museum Office took place in the Friedenssaal of the Osnabrück town hall.

Individual evidence

  1. ^ Inge Frankmöller: New building in Osnabrück during the Weimar Republic. Architecture and urban planning during the tenure of the City Planning Council Senator Friedrich Lehmann. With contributions by Eva Berger, Justus Haarmann, Dieter Hansmann, Anna Paech, Thomas Schleper, Bruno Switala . In: Karl Georg Kaster, Franz-Joachim Verspohl (ed.): Osnabrücker Kulturdenkmäler - Contributions to the art and cultural history of the city of Osnabrück . tape 1 . Rasch Verlag, Bramsche 1984, ISBN 3-922469-18-3 .
  2. ^ Eva Berger , Inge Frankmöller, Peter Junk, Karl Georg Kaster , Manfred Meinz , Wendelin Zimmer: Felix Nussbaum. Ostracized art - exile art - resistance art. The 100 most important works. Catalog book for the exhibition of the same name in the Museum of Cultural History in Osnabrück from May 6th to July 22nd 1990 on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the museum building . In: Osnabrück Cultural Monuments - Contributions to the art and cultural history of the city of Osnabrück . 3rd revised edition. tape 3 . Rasch Verlag, Osnabrück / Bramsche 1995, ISBN 3-930595-14-1 .
  3. Rosamunde Neugebauer (Ed.): Time in view. Felix Nusbaum and the modern age. Catalog for the exhibition from December 5, 2004 to March 28, 2005 . Rasch Verlag, Osnabrück / Bramsche 2004, ISBN 3-89946-043-X .
  4. Martin Deppner, Karl Janke (Ed.): The hidden trace. Jewish paths through modernity in the Felix-Nussbaum-Haus Osnabrück. Exhibition from December 7, 2008 to April 19, 2009 . Rasch Verlag, Osnabrück / Bramsche 2008.
  5. Thomas Schneider, Inge Jaehner, in collaboration with Walter M. Feilchenfeldt and Suzanne Schwarz Zuber (eds.): Remarques Impressionists. Art collecting and trading in exile . Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Cologne 2013.