We preserve the Wallach company’s heritage for the general public.


We maintain and update a digital catalogue of Wallach history and artistic practice, as well as its artifacts, collections, designs, motifs and exhibition materials.

Developing the Wallach collection

Through a University of Iowa Library Scholarship, the Wallach Project created an online collection of artifacts scattered across the world. These artifacts are catalogued by type and always available to the general public for research, curriculum development, and educational programing.

Textile samples from Fromholzer archive

Digitizing the Wallach silkscreens

Traditional printing dye
Wallach Project director Jamie Hall with Wallach Silkscreen
Fabric printing tables at Fromholzer workshop
Wallach Project director Amelia Rosenberg with Josef Fromholzer (lef) in Ruhmannsfelden

When Wallach Project director Amelia Rosenberg met master printer Josef Fromholzer for the first time in 2018, little did she know that in his workshop were stored more than 300 original Wallach silkscreens. Josef, whose father had worked with the Wallach brothers from the 1920s, became a great supporter and champion of our project until his death in 2023. That same year, Josef’s son Stefan welcomed us back to Ruhmannsfelden where we professionally photographed the vast majority of the silkscreens to safeguard this important heritage for the future. If you are interested in viewing these silkscreens, email us at info@wallachproject.org

Public Archives

The Wallach Project collaborates with institutions like the Munich City Museum, Spurlock Museum, and the Leo Baeck foundation to safeguard and showcase their collections of Wallach artifacts.

Münchner Stadtmuseum Wallach Archive
Spurlock Museum Julius Wallach Doll Archive
Leo Baeck Wallach Collection