Early works At the age of twenty-two Lammert was already getting attention at the Cologne
Werkbund exhibition. Two of his golden figures were removed from the exhibition as being morally offensive. All that remains of them today is a fragment of
Kopf einer goldenen Figur (Head of a Golden Figure) from 1914. The other,
Kleine Sitzende I (Small Girl Sitting I), had been created prior to that, in 1913. After the First World War he was represented by the gallery owner
Alfred Flechtheim, and participated in various exhibitions held by the group Das Junge Rheinland. He created portraits, large standing and reclining female figures and a variety of small-scale sculptures. At the same time he was taking public commissions, including for example
Mutter Erde (Mother Earth) in 1926, for the entrance to the South-West Cemetery in Essen, and a memorial to the war dead in
Marburg in the form of a lion (1926/27). He returned from his study visit in
Italy with
Weiblichen und männlichen Akt (Female and Male Figures) from 1932/33. After 1933, Lammert's early work was destroyed almost in its entirety in the run-up to the "
Degenerate Art" campaign, on the instigation of its protagonist,
Klaus Graf von Baudissin. This part of his output is known to us today primarily through the photographs of
Albert Renger-Patzsch and Edgar Jené. Together with some few small sculptures, only the
Kleine Liegende (Small Reclining Girl) of 1930, a fragment of
Ruth Tobi (1919) and an early version of
Karl Ernst Osthaus (1930) remain. Casts of these sculptures can be found today in some museums, including the Nationalgalerie in Berlin, the Germanisches Nationalmuseum in Nuremberg, and in the Smart Museum of Art in Chicago. We also have a series of drawings, made predominately during his study visits to France (1912/13) and Italy (1932).
Later works Lammert could only take up his art again after his return from eighteen years of exile. During this period he produced some portrait and memorial sculptures, including figures of
Karl Marx (1953),
Eduard von Winterstein (1954),
Friedrich Wolf (1954),
Wilhelm Pieck (1955), and
Thomas Müntzer (1956), but in the main he dedicated himself to his composition of the memorial site at the former
Ravensbrück concentration camp. After his death, some of Lammert's design was realised. The
Tragende (Woman with Burden) from 1957 was enlarged and exhibited on a plinth in 1959. Thirteen sculptures originally intended for the foot of the stele have stood in the Old Jewish Cemetery in Berlin Mitte since 1985 to commemorate the Jewish victims of fascism. This group of figures (arrangement by
Mark Lammert) was the first memorial in Berlin to the Jewish victims of the Nazis. A bust of Karl Marx, which was on display in the entrance to Berlin's
Humboldt University, was removed at the time of
German reunification. == Exhibitions (selection) ==