Closer: Portraits of Survival
Número del objetoM2017/015:004
TítuloCloser: Portraits of Survival
Creador Katherine Griffiths
DescripciónKathleen (Kitty) Lowinger is one of the survivors photographed by Katherine Griffiths for the exhibition 'Closer: Portraits of Survival', sponsored by the JCA Szlamek and Ester Lipman Memorial Endowment Fund.
Kitty remembers posing for this photograph on her third birthday. By this time, her father had been deported to a forced labour camp. Kitty’s mother wished to document the important milestones in her daughter’s life for her husband upon his return, but he was murdered by German soldiers.
The survivor and the object are both witnesses to history and retainers of memory, embodiments of a traumatic past but also conduits to that past, vessels through which we can contemplate the profound and ongoing impact of the Holocaust.
In these photographs history and memory fuse seamlessly together. As the events of the Holocaust recede ever further into the past, it is the human as well as historical stories that the survivors and their objects convey that will emblazon this searing memory into the hearts and minds of succeeding generations. Through contemplating the stories of these individuals in tandem with the often humble, yet deeply significant objects they hold, the past is brought to bear in the present, compelling us to grapple with its meaning now and into the future.
Kitty remembers posing for this photograph on her third birthday. By this time, her father had been deported to a forced labour camp. Kitty’s mother wished to document the important milestones in her daughter’s life for her husband upon his return, but he was murdered by German soldiers.
The survivor and the object are both witnesses to history and retainers of memory, embodiments of a traumatic past but also conduits to that past, vessels through which we can contemplate the profound and ongoing impact of the Holocaust.
In these photographs history and memory fuse seamlessly together. As the events of the Holocaust recede ever further into the past, it is the human as well as historical stories that the survivors and their objects convey that will emblazon this searing memory into the hearts and minds of succeeding generations. Through contemplating the stories of these individuals in tandem with the often humble, yet deeply significant objects they hold, the past is brought to bear in the present, compelling us to grapple with its meaning now and into the future.
Fecha 2016 - 2016
Temasurvivors, volunteers
Nombre del objetophotographs
Dimensiones
- width: 295.00 mm
height: 210.00 mm
Línea de créditoSydney Jewish Museum Collection, Donated by Katherine Griffiths
