thumb|Erna Rosenstein, Eternity Gives Birth to the Moment
Erna Rosenstein (May 17, 1913 - November 10, 2004) was a Polish-Jewish painter and Holocaust survivor. She was part of the surrealist movement both as a visual artist and a writer.
She was associated with the pre-war Kraków Group and helped launch the Second Kraków Group after World War II.
Early life and education
Rosenstein was born to Anna and Maksymillian Rosenstein on May 17, 1913 in Lviv, Austria-Hungary (now Ukraine). Her father was a lawyer and then a judge.
The Holocaust
The Rosenstein family was forced into the Lviv Ghetto after the Nazi invasion of Poland. The family escaped the ghetto, but were caught. Rosenstein's parents were murdered in front of her in 1942. Rosenstein was badly injured in the attack. She survived World War II, hiding under various aliases.
Post-war career
After the war, Rosenstein travel to Switzerland, Britain, and France. She met her husband, Polish-Jewish literary critic Artur Sandauer, when in Paris. This included many artists and friends of Rosenstein's. Her work at this time is noted to reflect this period of heightened antisemitism. In 1996 she received Jan Cybis Award.
Her work is in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago In 2021 the Hauser & Wirth Gallery in New York held her first solo exhibition outside of Poland, entitled Once Upon a Time. In 2023 her work was included in the exhibition Action, Gesture, Paint: Women Artists and Global Abstraction 1940-1970 at the Whitechapel Gallery in London.
Death
Rosenstein died on November 10, 2004 in Warsaw, Poland.
Rosenstein's brother, the Austrian professor Paul N. Rosenstein-Rodan went on to become a Boston University professor and economist. He coined the term "underdeveloped countries".
