Jimmy Ernst was born in 1920 in
Cologne, Germany, the son of
German Surrealist painter
Max Ernst and
Luise Straus-Ernst, a well-known art historian and journalist. His parents separated in 1922 and divorced in 1926 and Ernst remained with his mother in Cologne. He visited his father in France in 1930, where he met many artists, including
Luis Buñuel,
Salvador Dalí,
Alberto Giacometti,
André Masson,
Joan Miró,
Man Ray and
Yves Tanguy, as well as his father's lover
Leonora Carrington. In February 1933, a month after
Hitler became
Chancellor of Germany, the
SS searched Luise Straus' apartment. As a noted intellectual and a Jew she was regarded as suspect by the new regime. Ernst was sent to live with his grandfather, Luise's father, while his mother moved to Paris. In June 1938, Jimmy sailed to New York from
Le Havre on the liner
SS Manhattan. There he met many European exiles and the city's avant-garde. In 1940, he petitioned the
Emergency Rescue Committee (ERC) to secure the release of his father from internment. The ERC secured his release in 1941 and Max Ernst arrived in New York from
Nazi occupied France. In 1944, unknown to Jimmy, his mother was killed in
Auschwitz concentration camp after being sent there from the
Drancy internment camp in France. ==Career==