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Michael Kenna, SS Guard House (Death Gate) (detail),
Birkenau, Poland, 1992, Gelatin silver print, 24 x 20 in.,
© Ministère de la Culture-France.
January 15 – April 10, 2005
Wachovia Gallery · $4 special exhibition fee
This powerful and moving exhibition of 88 photographs was selected from
several thousand images produced over a twelve-year period by the
internationally-renowned English photographer Michael Kenna. Beginning in
1988, Kenna visited the locations of Nazi concentration and extermination
camps in Germany, Austria, Poland, the Czech Republic, Belgium, France,
Italy, Holland and Latvia.
|  Michael Kenna, Victims' Shoes,
Lublin-Majdanek, Poland, 1993, Gelatin silver print,
24 x 20 in. © Ministère de la Culture-France |
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His goal was to convey, from his own subjective
point of view, what he himself found impossible to forget about the camps:
the inexpressible suffering of the victims that can only be hinted at by the
haunting emptiness of the camps. His images convey a meditative quality,
inviting viewers to thoughtfully contemplate the expressive landscapes that,
through their histories, evoke the disturbing realities of the camps. Seen
together in this exhibition, the images resonate a greater truth that
challenges our collective conscience to avoid repeating this dark and
sinister part of human history.
Impossible to Forget: The Nazi Camps Fifty Years After is organized
by Patrimoine Photographique, Paris, with the support of the French
Ministry of Culture, and is toured by Curatorial Assistance Traveling
Exhibitions (CATE), Los Angeles.
A 128-page, hardbound catalogue by Michael Kenna, featuring 105
duotone plates, will be available for sale in the Museum's gift shops
(both in Doylestown and New Hope) at $65 for non-members and $58.50
for Museum members.
Sponsored by Worth & Company, with additional support from
Burton Cohen and Silverman Family Partnerships.
Media Sponsor: Jewish Exponent.
ALSO SEE
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