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Renowned Holocaust denying artist addresses provocative art, beliefs

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Charles Krafft says he doesn't believe the Holocaust could have happened. (Photo courtesy of KJPhotos.com.)

Charles Krafft has recently been outed as a Holocaust denier, and one who believes that Adolf Hitler has been unfairly vilified. He says, however, that he's not advocating for a return to Nazism -- just that intellectually he doesn't believe the Holocaust could have happened.


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Seattle-based artist Charles Krafft is a painter and sculptor whose work is both provocative and respected — it's been collected by major museums and prominently reviewed.

Krafft has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Soros Foundation. But some of his work consisted of imagery of dictators, notably Hitler, and swastikas in various contexts.

That imagery was used ironically, the artist said, and he was praised for it in the art world and the media. But earlier this year, a reporter for the Seattle Stranger discovered that Charles Krafft was not just an ironic provocateur.

Her article revealed that during the last decade, he had also become a Holocaust denier. Admirers of Krafft’s art were left wondering whether the use of swastikas and Hitler was a form of surreptitious propaganda for hate.

Krafft maintains that what was intended as ironic then remains ironic now.

“I knew that these were hot symbols,” he said. “I’d been working with this group, Neue Slowenische Kunst, a Slovenian collective, and they were mixing tropes that included Nazi symbols. That’s kind of where I got infected with this idea, where I began to think about using them myself.

"Prior to that, I was apolitical. I was using these symbols before I was a Holocaust denier. I wasn’t even interested in the Holocaust, really,” he said.

Krafft asserts that he is not a racist or a Nazi, but a “revisionist” whose ideas are based in history.

“I just don’t buy this thing about 2,000 people a day being gassed at Auschwitz,” Krafft said. “It doesn’t add up to me technologically."

It is widely and generally accepted that some 10 to 11 million people, mostly Jews but also Soviets, handicapped people and prisoners of wars, were killed by Hitler's Nazi Germany.

But Krafft stands by his work, including a particularly controversial teapot, in the shape of Hitler's head.

“I think he’s been demonized excessively,” Krafft said. “I’m not trying to resurrect National Socialism or Hitlerism, but my opinion of the man has changed considerably since I began my revisionist investigations. So the teapot started out ironical and still stays ironical. Because for God’s sake, if you look at that thing, it’s goofy. And I don’t understand why people now think that this is some sort of an attempt to slip my evil neo-Nazi ideology into the homes, museums, and galleries of the unsuspecting.”

Krafft’s public embrace of Holocaust denial is likely to wreck his career as a respected artist — his works were recently withdrawn from an exhibition in France — though he may garner fans among extremists.

“The thing about being a Holocaust denier — when they throw that word around at you, it’s not good socially, so I’m having a little bit of a tough time dealing with old friends that are suddenly distancing themselves from me," Krafft said. "But I don’t have any regrets for making the art that I did or for my intellectual curiosity, which led me to this opinion that I have, that I’m holding right now. And I’m saying it’s not forever. I mean, I could change my mind about it.”

Krafft doesn't believe this change of belief has anything to do with mental illness — just an informed change of belief.

“Nobody’s said I’m crazy, although somebody wrote that I might be getting senile. Do you think I need some sort of psychiatric help?” Krafft asked. “If I find a psychiatrist that can help me ... I’ll get back to you and let you know when I’m well."

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Found in:   arts & entertainment   visual arts   history   USA   Germany
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JOHN 17 March, 2013 11:57:03
You are the one that is deluded...Why don't you actually read a book by Vincent Thorn...and use your own logic...not what you have been told since you were a child...then you can at least speak intelligently on the subject.
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FilthyLiberal 18 March, 2013 08:05:08
Artists aren't the brightest people on the planet.

If you think this is true: "It doesn’t add up to me technologically." then you have very little experience in watching assembly line procedures. Your ignorance is astounding.
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John 18 March, 2013 08:56:55
The text portion of this article seems reasonably balanced. I think the point of his art is that by mixing political tropes with art forms, it is possible to break down rigid barriers to more open discussions.
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FilthyLiberal 21 March, 2013 08:33:26
John - I disagree. As an artist, I look upon this work as that of a person who, how has admitted he, "just used designs" from someplace he found that he thought would be popular because they are controversial. It shows no such deep thinking or desire to open barriers, not to me anyway. In fact, it shows the opposite - shallowness. It shows willingness to do whatever it takes to make a buck, with no regard to anything. "Hey, I'll make a Hitler head teapot - that's sure to pi$$ someone off and get me talked about". Feh.

No disrespect intended.
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Incredulous 21 March, 2013 03:21:20
The man is simply lazy, and we expect our educated artists to be more careful than this. There are mountains of documents proving that the Holocaust occurred, and most of them were created by the Nazis themselves! Being ignorant is not a badge of honor.
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Suzanne McDermott 24 March, 2013 02:38:20
I recommend that this "artist" go visit Buchenwald, Auschwitz or the site of any other Nazi concentration camp. **** this ******* who uses these "tropes" as career enhancing, media manipulating devices. This is not art, this is hucksterism. I'm so sick of the art world and everyone in the media who sucks up to poseurs, provocateurs and hucksters. Money, money, money. How about some transformational truth? How about telling it when the emperors have no clothes? You're giving this guy MORE airtime? Really. Don't take a look at him. Take a look at yourself.
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David F 14 April, 2013 01:26:17
First, I don't think people can separate out their reaction to Mr. Kraffts views on Hitler and the Holocaust from feelings about his art. He's used Nazi imagery in his work and he is using his position as a well-known artist to further this rather twisted view--I see no reason why people shouldn't react to that.

After all, if he wasn't the so-well-known Mr. Krafft, no one would give a rip about his opinions or his art, which I find rather weak and kitschy (a word, that if we believe Mr. Krafft, was used by increasing fewer people who died in camps during WWII.)

Second, I find it odd that Mr. Krafft feels he is knowledgeable enough to speak with seeming authority about the Holocast after one visit to to a concentration camp. It would be like me visiting Dublin and then saying the Irish Famine wasn't as bad as people paint it.

As to people over-demonizing Hitler, I suppose Mr. Krafft would say the same about Pol Pot, who said: 'I want you to know that everything I did, I did for my country.'
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