Номер объектаM2010/124:090
Создатель Ben Apfelbaum (photographer)
ОписаниеColour photograph of Israel's Consular General making a speech in front of a bronze and cement sculpture unveiled in honour of Raoul Wallenberg in 1985. The sculpture is located in the Raoul Wallenberg Garden, corner Queen Street and Edgecliff Road Woollahra. This photograph was taken by Ben Apfelbaum.
Raoul Wallenberg (1912 - 1947) was a Swedish humanitarian who worked in Budapest, Hungary, during World War II to rescue Jews from the Holocaust. Between July and December 1944, he issued protective passports and housed Jews in buildings established as Swedish territory, saving tens of thousands of lives.
From an early age Ben Apfelbaum was aware of a void of family photographs in the home. His parents, both Holocaust survivors, were the only survivors of their families and aside from two small photographs that his father saved from before the war, there were no images of grandparents or extended family. Apfelbaum received a Brownie box camera from his parents when he was seven years old. With no formal training, he has been taking photographs ever since.
For the past several decades, Apfelbaum has focused on photographing Sydney's Jewish community, both for his own documentation and as the honorary photographer of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies during the 1990s.
The visual record of these ancient customs and traditions testify to the continuity of Jewish life in a dynamic multicultural society that is characteristic of contemporary Australian life. He states: "I have sought in my photographs to portray the community with affection and, in some cases, as an unique ethnic group emphasising the symbolism of a festival and the distinctiveness of our people which has helped our survival over thousands of years".
Apfelbaum was a contributor to Camera Craft magazine (Australian Camera). During Australia's Bicentennial year (1988) he made it a personal project to document the celebrations, published in 1989 as 'Celebrating Australia'. He was a co-photographer on a book entitled Sydney - Discover the City. For two years he was the photographer for calendars celebrating Sydney's multicultural communities. His work appeared in a group exhibition held at Sydney's Town Hall pertaining to the diversity of life in South America to raise money for orphanages there. Over 100 of his images are in the State Library of NSW collection. His 2007 solo exhibition entitled Ben's Lens at the Sydney Jewish Museum showcased the Sydney Jewish community, following the Jewish calendar of religious festivals, life-cycle ceremonies, communal carnivals, demonstrations and commemorations - documenting secular and religious, private and public Jewish life and culture in a uniquely Sydney context.
Raoul Wallenberg (1912 - 1947) was a Swedish humanitarian who worked in Budapest, Hungary, during World War II to rescue Jews from the Holocaust. Between July and December 1944, he issued protective passports and housed Jews in buildings established as Swedish territory, saving tens of thousands of lives.
From an early age Ben Apfelbaum was aware of a void of family photographs in the home. His parents, both Holocaust survivors, were the only survivors of their families and aside from two small photographs that his father saved from before the war, there were no images of grandparents or extended family. Apfelbaum received a Brownie box camera from his parents when he was seven years old. With no formal training, he has been taking photographs ever since.
For the past several decades, Apfelbaum has focused on photographing Sydney's Jewish community, both for his own documentation and as the honorary photographer of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies during the 1990s.
The visual record of these ancient customs and traditions testify to the continuity of Jewish life in a dynamic multicultural society that is characteristic of contemporary Australian life. He states: "I have sought in my photographs to portray the community with affection and, in some cases, as an unique ethnic group emphasising the symbolism of a festival and the distinctiveness of our people which has helped our survival over thousands of years".
Apfelbaum was a contributor to Camera Craft magazine (Australian Camera). During Australia's Bicentennial year (1988) he made it a personal project to document the celebrations, published in 1989 as 'Celebrating Australia'. He was a co-photographer on a book entitled Sydney - Discover the City. For two years he was the photographer for calendars celebrating Sydney's multicultural communities. His work appeared in a group exhibition held at Sydney's Town Hall pertaining to the diversity of life in South America to raise money for orphanages there. Over 100 of his images are in the State Library of NSW collection. His 2007 solo exhibition entitled Ben's Lens at the Sydney Jewish Museum showcased the Sydney Jewish community, following the Jewish calendar of religious festivals, life-cycle ceremonies, communal carnivals, demonstrations and commemorations - documenting secular and religious, private and public Jewish life and culture in a uniquely Sydney context.
Дата 1985
Наименованиеphotographs
Материалphotographic emulsion, paper, paper
Размерность
- height: 150.00 mm
width: 225.00 mm
Кредитная линияSydney Jewish Museum Collection, Donated by Ben Apfelbaum
