Edith Altman (23 May 1931 â 19 October 2020) was a German Jewish-American artist. She emigrated from Germany to the United States at a young age. Her work investigated the lowest and the highest levels of any hierarchy. She explored systems (governmental, financial, cultural, etc.) of power, and the powerless. Altman is "a student of Jewish mysticism", which has influenced her work.
Edith Altman was born in Altenburg, Germany on 23 May 1931. She escaped the Nazi regime in 1938 as a little girl and emigrated to Chicago, Illinois. Her father, Max Hittman (Markus Hüttmann), escaped from Buchwenwald, where he had been imprisoned since 1938. She lost her grandfathers and grandmothers on both sides of her family to the Holocaust. In 1981 she attended Wayne State University in Detroit, Michigan, and was a resident at the University of Nebraska Omaha (UNO) Art Gallery for the term of one month. Her work is in the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (MCA). She resides in the Chicago area. Altman died on 19 October 2020, at the age of 89.
Altman's work is deeply influenced by both her experience as a Holocaust survivor and her Jewish faith. In her secular work, she places an emphasis on remembering the Holocaust as a central theme.