Archive for June, 2008

Katarzyna Bojarska, “The Presence of the Holocaust in the Work of Polish Artists”

Posted in Art, Holocaust with tags , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Shimon Attie

Posted in Art, Holocaust, Installations, Memory, Photography with tags , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Shimon Attie. Almstadtstrasse 43, Berlin (1930). (car parked in front of Hebrew bookstore). 1991

Concerned with questions of memory, place, and identity, Shimon Attie gives visual form to both personal and collective memories by introducing histories of marginalized and forgotten communities into the physical landscape of the present. The Writing on the Wall project (1991-1993) took place in Berlin’s former Jewish quarter, the Scheunenviertel neighborhood. There Attie projected slides made from pre-Holocaust photographs of the neighborhood’s Jewish residents and shops in the same (or sometimes nearby) locations where the original images were taken. He then photographed the resulting scene. A woman from the past looks out the window of a building now scrawled with graffiti. A pigeon shop with cages stacked on the sidewalk is restored to an otherwise empty street. The life and industry suggested in the projections of the past strike an unexpected counterpoint to the crumbling facades and apparently abandoned places of the present. (from: Museum of Contemporary Photography web page at: <a class=”aligncenter”

href=”http://www.mocp.org/collections/permanent/attie_shimon.php”>http://www.mocp.org/collections/permanent/attie_shimon.php

References: 

http://mocp.org/exhibitions/2004/05/shimon_attie_th.php

Attie, Shimon. Sites Unseen: Shimon Attie European Projects: Installations and Photographs. Burlington, VT: Verve, 1998.

Attie, Shimon, and Christopher Beaver. Between Dreams and History: The Making of Shimon Attie’s Public Art Projects(videorecording). Ben Lomond, CA: distributed by The Video Project, 2000 .

Attie, Shimon, Natasha Egan, and Alexander Stille. The History of Another. Santa Fe, NM: Twin Palms, 2004.

Attie, Shimon, et al. The Writing on the Wall: Projections in Berlin’s Jewish Quarter. Heidelberg: Edition Braus, 1994.

Mikael Levin, “War Story”

Posted in Holocaust, Memory, Photography with tags , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

“In 1944-45 an American war correspondent, Meyer Levin embarked on a journey through Europe. His assignment was to seek out the remnants of Jewish communities, to cover the “Jewish story”. Sharing a Jeep with him was French photographer Eric Schwab. Schwab was photographing the war. He was also on a personal mission, searching for his mother who had been deported in 1943. In his autobiography, In Search, Meyer Levin describes that journey from Paris to Prague, through the Battle of the Bulge, the liberation of the concentration camps, and the first stirrings of the Cold War. In the fall of 1995 Mikael Levin retraced his father’s journey. He photographed the concentration camps and the Europe of today, contrasting his journey to his father’s experiences of fifty years ago. Mikael Levin has assembled those photographs together with his father’s writings and with a selection of Eric Schwab’s photographs from 1945, creating a narrative of images and text that span fifty years and two generations.” (from artist’s web page, online at: <a class=”aligncenter”

www.mikaellevin.com

 

“The art of memory: Holocaust memorials in history”

Posted in Exhibitions, Holocaust, Memory, Museums with tags , , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

The exhibition “The art of memory: Holocaust memorials in history “, was held at The Jewish Museum, New York, March 13-July 31, 1994.

Publications:

James, E. Young, Matthew Baigell, Romy Golan (ed.), The art of memory : Holocaust memorials in history, Prestel; New York 1994.

Online at: http://imaginarymuseum.org/MHV/PZImhv/YoungHolocaust1994.html

George Segal

Posted in Art, Auschwitz, Holocaust, Memorials, Sculpture with tags , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

References:

Leo Bersani, “George Segal: the Holocaust, 1984″ (Art Forum, Feb, 1999): http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0268/is_6_37/ai_54050181

Joan Rosenbaum, “George Segal and the Jewish Experience”, in: Americam Art, vol. 15, no. 1 (2001)

Daniel Libeskind

Posted in Holocaust, Memory, Museums with tags , , , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

The Jewish Museum Berlin (2001)

Online at:

http://www.daniel-libeskind.com/projects/show-all/jewish-museum-berlin/

References:

Daniel Libeskind, Trauma, in: S. Hornstein, F. Jacobowitz (ed.) Image and Remembrance. Representation and the Holocaust, Indiana UP, 2003

Christian Boltanski

Posted in Art, Holocaust, Installations, Memory, Photography with tags , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Reserve (Réserve), 1990

Boltanski started using a new raw material, clothes, in 1988. They first appeared in a poignant piece, Réserve, Canada. This work echoes the warehouses that Nazis used to store the belongings of the deported. Boltanski, in other words, associated clothes with death from the outset (as he had with photography). In his words, “Someone’s photograph, garment or dead body are pretty much the same thing: there was someone there, now they’re gone.” Garments are also vestiges or marks that bear testimony to a life now past.

That is what clothes meant in the string of Réserves that followed. They are all installations that play on the subject of death and memory. In his 1989 Réserve: la Fête de Pourim (Purim Holiday) and 1990 Réserve: Lac des morts (Lake of the Dead), the clothes lay on the floor. In his 1989 Réserve du Musée des enfants (Children’s Museum), he stacked them in rows (1).

For his 1990 Réserve, he lined the walls of a whole room in loft-smelling hand-me-down clothes. Because this work’s overbearing presence is not just visual: it is also olfactory – a dimension that plastic art does not use enough (2).
Much like the other works in this series, the atmosphere that the 1990 Réserve creates is a door to melancholic contemplation of the body as a brittle vessel, vanity and death (all of which ranked among Boltanski’s favourite themes in the 1990s).” (from Centre Pompidou catalogue, online at: http://www.centrepompidou.fr/education/ressources/ENS-boltanski_en/ENS-boltanski_en.htm

Autel de Lycée Chases (1987)

Christian BOLTANSKI, born in 1944 in Paris, has produced many works combining a variety of materials on the traditional theme in Western art of human transience as represented in vanitas. Starting his career as a motion picture maker, he began in 1985 a series called “Monuments” using portraits of children. 
Autel de Lycée Chases represents the extension of that series, with portraits of Jewish students enrolled in high school in Vienna in 1931 arranged in the shape of an altar softly illuminated by light bulbs. While this is all the information about the students provided by the artist and there is no overt reference to the Holocaust that the students would suffer in ensuing years, the scene nevertheless hints at the transience of human existence.

Steve Reich, “Different Trains” (1988)

Posted in Art, Holocaust, Music with tags , , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Different Trains, released in 1989, captures Reich harnessing a return to using speech patterns in his work, as in ‘Rain,’ with a spare though startling string accompaniment in the form of the Kronos Quartet. The ‘Different Trains’ theme originates from Reich’s childhood, several wartime years spent travelling with his governess between his estranged parents, his mother in Los Angeles and his father in New York. Exciting, romantic trips, full of adventure for the young Reich but many years later, it dawned on him that, had he been in Germany during the ethnic cleansing by the Nazis, his Jewish background would have ensured that the trains he would have been riding on would have been very ‘different trains.’ He set about collecting recordings to effectively recreate and document the atmosphere of his travels to contrast with those of the unfortunate refugees. By combining the sound of train whistles, pistons and the scream of brakes with extracts of speech by porter Lawrence Davis, who took the same rides as Reich between the big apple and Los Angeles, governess Virginia and three holocaust survivors (Paul, Rachel and Rachella), Reich creates music of great intensity and feeling. The rhythmic patterns and pitch of the voices establishes the phrases and course of the music heard in the quartet: ‘crack train from New York,’ and ‘1939′ for example, heard in the invigorating, steam-driven opening movement, America-Before The War. The slow, middle section, Europe-During The War, finds the refugees in the midst of their nightmare, ‘no more school’ and being herded into the cattle wagons. ‘They shaved us, They tatooed a number on our arm, Flames going up to the sky- it was smoking.’ Sirens from the Kronos help to convey the despair and confusion of the Jewish plight. Reconciliation is achieved in part three, After The War, where Paul, Rachel and Rachella are transported to live in America. There is an incredibly poignant moment when Paul proclaims ‘the war was over,’ Rachella, in sheer, fragile disbelief, asks ‘Are you sure?.’

Melissa Gould

Posted in Art, Auschwitz, Holocaust, Installations, Memorials, Memory, Music with tags , , , , , , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Still Life: Anne Frank Memorial Pencils (1988)

Still Life

Floor Plan (1991)

Night view of Floor Plan

“Notes From Underground,” by  Alvin Curran.  You can hear an excerpt here: http://www.alvincurran.com/NotesFromUndergroundhiMP3excerpt.mp3

From Adler to Zybler (1992)

View of Berlin 1992 Exhibition.

“FROM ADLER TO ZYLBER (literally, “from eagle to silver”), “an alphabetic cosmology of the dead,” is an invented lexicon of obituary pictograms based on German-Jewish names taken from an Auschwitz transport list.

The original document inspiring this project is the 1000-name transport list of Convoy #42 (6 November 1942; France to Auschwitz), which I accidentally found in Memorial to the Jews Deported from France 1942-1944 by Serge Klarsfeld. My grandfather was among 1,000 Jews from all over Europe on this particular train, many of whom had sought refuge in what had been unoccupied France.

FROM ADLER TO ZYLBER is a symbolic continuation of Convoy #42’s journey.

From this transport list I originally selected 100 German-Jewish names with meanings referring to elements in the natural world. Each name is represented by a visual interpretation in the form of a pictogram–pairing the name, written in Gothic script, with a number and a different associative image. The images were taken from pre-War sources of European popular culture–lexicons, school- and text-books, fairy-tales, children’s books and other printed ephemera, then collaged together and sometimes slightly altered by drawing. This mixture of elements is contained by a black border (reminiscent of a death notice) and a thin outer edge of white. Each pictogram, photocopied onto white paper, measures 36″ by 36″ square. I now present this project as a 36-pictogram installation scaled down from the original 100 (36 is a multiple of 18; in the Hebrew alphabet the number 18 is equivalent to the word chai, meaning life).

The title FROM ADLER TO ZYLBER refers not only to the first and last names chosen from the transport list of Convoy #42 but also describes the system by which the pictograms are arranged within a given space. They mimic the order of nature–Adler (eagle) is hung high above, Zylber (silver) nearest the ground, and so on.

FROM ADLER TO ZYLBER is an ongoing project having many variants. The open-ended FROM ADLER TO ZYLBER cycle is a clue-filled rebus seeking to tell a story without words “illustrating” the tragic fate of the European Jews. I consider the pictograms as gravestones for people who had no funerals.”

Schadenfreude: an Installation (1995)

Photograph of Schadenfreude Installation

“SCHADENFREUDE 

explored anti-Semitism by way of a “Nazi wallpaper showroom.” (Schadenfreude is a German word meaning the delight one gets from someone else’s misfortune.) Using illustrations taken from one 1935 German Brockhaus dictionary I created six wallpaper patterns through combining and slightly altering the illustrations by drawing on them. While the designs may seem innocuous at first glance, their more tragic and ironic implications (as seen from the historical perspective of more than 60 years) are revealed with longer viewing. The motifs were first enlarged as photocopies, and then produced as silkscreened wallpaper which I ultimately arranged into a 1600-square-foot three-room installation at the Imperial War Museum, London, (1995).” >/p>

All text and images from artists web page. Online at:

http://www.megophone.com/projects.html

 

Ellen Rothenberg, “The Anne Frank Project”

Posted in Art, Installations, Uncategorized with tags , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

“American artist Ellen Rothenberg (born 1949) gave artistic expression to a longstanding preoccupation in the form of her Anne Frank Project, a tripartite installation consisting of A Partial Index (1991), A Probability Bordering on Certainty (1993) and The Conditions for Growth (1994). Her realization, after reading the critical and unexpurgated version of the diary, that earlier editions had eliminated nearly all references to the young girl’s burheoning sexuality and her troubled relationship with her mother, as well as to the family’s German origins and the fact that now, in Amsterdam, they were in hiding from the Germans, prompted Rothenberg to explore the ways in which Anne Frank has been mythologized, turned into a kind of Jewish saint stripped of both specificity and individual complexity.” (from: Absence/Presence. Critical Essays on the Artistic Memory of the Holocaust, ed. Steve Feinstein)

 

Online at:

http://www.ellenrothenberg.com/index.html

Abraham Ravett

Posted in Art, Film, Holocaust, Memory with tags , , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

 

Abraham Ravett was born in Poland in 1947, raised in Israel and emigrated to the United States in 1955. He holds a B.F.A and M.F.A. in Filmmaking and Photography and has been an independent filmmaker for the past twenty years.

Mr. Ravett has received grants for his work from The National Endowment for the Arts, The Artists Foundation Inc., The Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities, The Japan Foundation, The Hoso Bunka Foundation, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, and the National Foundation for Jewish Culture.

His films have been screened internationally including the Museum of Modern Art, Anthology Film Archives, The Collective For Living Cinema, Pacific Film Archives, S.F. Cinematheque, L.A. Forum, Innis Film Society, and Image Forum in Japan.

Mr. Ravett teaches filmmaking and photography at Hampshire College, Amherst, MA.

 

Half Sister (1985)

At 26, Abraham Ravett learned that his mother had previously been married and lost her family at Auschwitz, including his half-sister, Toncia, who was killed when she was 6 years old. At age 36, Ravett saw a photograph of his half-sister for the first time. Half Sister is a cinematic amalgam of memory and imagination, inspired by Ravett’s conception of a life that would have been.

Everything’s For You (1989)

Ravett attempts to reconcile issues in his life as the child of a Holocaust survivor in this experimental non-narrative film. Ravett reflects upon his relationships with his family, from his now-deceased father (who survived both the Lodz Ghetto and Auschwitz) to his own young children. He utilizes family photographs and footage, archival footage from the Ghetto Fighters’ House in Israel, cel animation by Emily Hubley, and computer graphics, to create a film about memory, death, and what critic Bruce Jenkins calls “the power of the photographic image and sound to resurrect the past.”

In Memory (1993)

n this non-narrative short, footage of life from the Lodz Ghetto is juxtaposed against the chanting of “Kel Maleh Rachamim,” a plea to God to let the souls of those “slaughtered and burned” find peace. Images include winter street scenes, women drawing water from a well, men breaking up ice, a Nazi roundup and a mass hanging. The message of this tribute to members of Ravett’s family (and to all those who perished under Nazi occupation) is “may their memory endure.”

The March (1999)

 

Both my parents were in Auschwitz and survived “The Death March.” My father, deceased since 1979, never spoke about his experiences. My mother, on the other hand, continuously made references to the “miracle” of her survival and recounted in vivid detail what it was like to walk for miles in the bitter cold with just a blanket and a pair of wooden shoes (“Trepches”). She tells a story of how one night when the entire column of inmates took a rest at a nearby farm, she found a small sack of sugar cubes in a hay loft, which kept her and a companion alive for several days. She recalls how the German soldiers would confront a weakened inmate who paused for a moment’s rest with the following shout: “Kanst du lofen?” (can you walk?) If the reply was negative or not forthcoming, she would be shot on the spot.

I’ve made six films which reflect on how the Holocaust affected my parents, our evolving relationship, and my own psychological and emotional response to their experiences. The March continues this cinematic exploration by detailing one woman’s recollections of that experience. It also serves as a meditation on time elapsed and the fragility of personal memory.

Utilizing a series of recorded film interviews conducted with my mother over thirteen year period (1984-1997), I ask the following question each time: “Mom, what do you remember about the March?” The complexity of her responses, the visible emotional toll experienced with each reply, and the ensuing portrait of her aging process, form the core of this twenty five minute 16mm film.

 

Lunch with Fela (2005)

Lunch With Fela, is the filmmaker’s response to the passing of his parent, Fela Ravett. Utilizing a combination of DV footage shot during her stay at a nearby nursing facility, excerpts from previously made 16mm films, animation sequences, plus remaining family memorabilia, the film renders the presence and absence of a much loved parent.

Alfredo Jaar, “Let there be light: the Rwanda project 1994-1998″

Posted in Art, Photography, Rwanda with tags , , on June 30, 2008 by theobjectlesson

http://imaginarymuseum.org/MHV/PZImhv/JaarRwandaProject.html

“Alfredo Jaar’s Rwanda Project 1994-98 inspired a host of difficult and contradictory reactions. His subject is, as always, politically, socially and morally enormous. He deals with the systematic murder of Tutsi men, women and children by the Hutu death squads in the spring of 1994. In August of that year, Jaar went to Rwanda to see for himself what had happened, and took thousands of photographs. As testament and memorial, he focused on the survivors. In this presentation he singled out one in particular, Gutete Emerita, a young woman who witnessed the killing of her husband and two sons and who, with her daughter, miraculously escaped, hiding in a swamp for three weeks.” (Lilly Wei, Art in America, Dec, 1998)

The Rwanda Project attempts to counter and transform the conventions of photojournalism, which frequently objectifies violence through unmediated images of victimization. Alternatively, Jaar reverses the lens’ eye to focus on the eyes of the witnesses and the hauntingly beautiful landscape in which this massacre was enacted as a means of eliciting an emotional response from the viewer.

References:

http://www.anu.edu.au/hrc/research/WtoS/Sever2.pdfhttp://www.tate.org.uk/research/tateresearch/tatepapers/08spring/chow.shtm

Eli Cohen, “Under the Domim Tree” (Etz Hadomim Tafus)

Posted in Film, Holocaust, Victim/Executioner with tags , , , on June 28, 2008 by theobjectlesson

The sequel to Summer of Aviya, Under the Domim Tree is based on the autobiographical book by Gila Almagor. The film is set in the early 50’s and follows a group of teenage orphans who survived the Nazi concentration camps and now live on a kibbutz in Israel. As told through the eyes of Aviya, the only sabra (Israeli-born) among them, the story unfolds against the backdrop of the public debate on the issue of accepting German reparations for Nazi atrocities. During the day the youths seem like average teenagers, but when night falls, painful memories of the Holocaust overwhelm their imaginations. When life becomes truly unbearable, the teens find refuge under the beautiful Domim Tree – the only place that gives them a trace of inner solace and the hope for a new life.

Art Spiegelman, “Maus”

Posted in Auschwitz, Holocaust, Memory, Testimonies with tags , , , , , on June 28, 2008 by theobjectlesson

 

Art Spiegelman, Maus I: A Survivor’s Tale. My Father Bleeds History, New York: Pantheon, 1986.

Art Spiegelman, Maus II: A Survivor’s Tale. And Here My Troubles Began, New York: Pantheon, 1991.


 

References:

James E. Young, Writing and Rewriting the Holocaust, Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1988.

Jean Amery, At the Mind’s Limits: Contemplations by a Survivor on Auschwitz and its Realities, Bloomington: Indiana UP, 1980.

Lawrence L. Langer, Holocaust Testimonies: The Ruins of Memory, New Haven: Yale UP, 1991.

Saul Friedlander, (ed.) Probing the Limits of Representation: Nazism and the “Final Solution”, Cambridge: Harvard UP, 1992.

Saul Friedlander, Reflections of Nazism: An Essay on Kitsch and Death, New York: Harper, 1984.

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2278/is_n3_v20/ai_18298424/pg_1?tag=artBody;col1

Auschwitz

Posted in Auschwitz, Holocaust with tags , on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

 

“This destruction of the ability to measure destruction results in Auschwitz’s fundamental ambiguity as a historical site and event, as well as a symbol: forever caught in the ambiguity of its signifying force, Auschwitz can never be more than a symbol of what can no longer be symbolized. For we have lost the measure to decide of what Auschwitz is a symbol. In this sense, too, Auschwitz, and the Holocaust for which it synecdochically stands, cannot be represented. For the metaphorical principles of language have ceased to function.”

Ernst van Alphen, “Caught by Images. Visual Imprints in Holocaust Testimonies”, in: S. Hornstein and F.Jacobowitz (ed.) Image and Remembrance. Representation and the Holocaust, Indiana University Press 2003.

 

Rachel Whiteread, Holocaust Memorial in Vienna

Posted in Holocaust, Memorials, Memory with tags , , on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Jochen Gerz, “Monument against Fascism”

Posted in Memorials with tags on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

The Municipal Council of Hamburg-Harburg reached the decision in 1983, after several years of discussion, to erect aMonument against Fascism. Following a public hearing the commission was awarded to Jochen Gerz and Esther Shalev–Gerz. 
The artwork invited the city’s residents and visitors to engrave their names and sign against fascism on the monument, a 12-metre tall lead coated square column. As soon as the accessible part of the monument was covered with signatures, it was lowered into the ground. Between the inauguration on October 10, 1986, and its disappearance on November 10, 1993, theMonument against Fascism was lowered into the ground eight times. 
Today, a text in seven languages recounts the history of the Monument against Fascism: the 70,000 signatures, the sinking of the column and its disappearance. This text reads: 

We invite the citizens of Harburg, and visitors to the town, to add their names here next to ours. In doing so we commit ourselves to remain vigilant. As more and more names cover this 12-metre tall lead column, it will gradually be lowered into the ground. One day it will have disappeared completely, and the site of the Harburg Monument against Fascism will be empty. In the end it is only we ourselves who can stand up against injustice. 

 

 

Object: Column of galvanized steel with a lead coating, 1200 x 100 x 100 cm, weight ca. 7 t., underground shaft with viewing window, depth 14 m, concrete footing, 2 steel styluses for signing the surface, text panel. Site: Hamburg-Harburg, Harburger Ring at the corner of Hölertwiete/Sand, Harburg-Rathaus S-line train station. 

Online at:

http://www.gerz.fr/html/main.html?res_ident=5a9df42460494a34beea361e835953d8&art_ident=76fdb6702e151086198058d4e4b0b8fc

Alain Resnais, “L’année dernière à Marienbad (Last Year in Marienbad)”

Posted in Film, Memory with tags , on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Alain Resnais, “Hiroshima mon amour”

Posted in Film, Memory, Trauma with tags , , on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Based on the novel by Marguerite Duras, it is a romantic drama about a young French actress appearing in an anti-war film in the rubble and reconstruction of the city of Hiroshima. She quickly begins a brief unstable affair with a Japanese architect. The affair brings to light the political and cultural tensions that underlie even their most personal experiences and memories. The film made groundbreaking use of then innovative flashbacks to explore her repressed memories of a German lover killed in World War II and the subsequent humiliation and captivity imposed on her by her family. This movie was a great success for Resnais, garnering him international fame and cementing his place in French cinema history.

Sean Mathias, “Bent”

Posted in Film, Holocaust with tags , , on June 21, 2008 by theobjectlesson

Based on a play by Martin Sherman from 1979, which in its original West-End production starred Ian McKellen and Richard Gere in its original Broadway production. It resolves around the persecution of gay men in third Reich Germany after the murder of Sturmabteilung leader Ernst Rohm.