In Fitting Memory. Sybil Milton, Ira Nowinski. Published by Wayne State University Press. For additional information about this book

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Transcription:

In Fitting Memory Sybil Milton, Ira Nowinski Published by Wayne State University Press Milton, Sybil & Nowinski, Ira. In Fitting Memory: The Art and Politics of Holocaust Memorials. Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 2018. Project MUSE., https://muse.jhu.edu/. For additional information about this book https://muse.jhu.edu/book/61448 Access provided at 2 Apr 2019 12:11 GMT with no institutional affiliation This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

PREFACE l Fitting Memory is a critical survey of Holocaust memorials and monuments in Europe, Israel, and the United States. In this volume the Holocaust is defined retroactively as the collective designation for the Nazi mass murder of jews, Gypsies, and the handicapped and for the related persecution of Soviet prisoners of war (POWs) and other ideological opponents. In this book we have attempted to provide an analysis of the complex interrelationship between authentic historic sites, disparate and ephemeral representations of history, and the changing political and aesthetic balance between commemoration and escapism. Using text and photographs, we have tried to show how since 1945 these memorials and monuments have served not only as secular shrines, but also as temporal institutions reflecting changing public constituencies and distinctive political, social, and cultural contexts. The transmission of the history of the Holocaust in memorials and monuments involves consideration of institutional and political constraints. Such constraints apply especially to the financing of monuments that might offend governments, patrons, or the communities in which they are located. The Holocaust has thus sometimes been presented in distorted exhibitions or sanitized sites. The cost and labor of maintaining the original sites, changing demands and expectations of diverse public constituencies, and the need to present sophisticated and changing historical research about a tragic past to escapist audiences that have been conditioned by television docudramas pose virtually insoluble problems. The forces that shape and constrain the presentation and transmission of the past to the present and the future also affect memorials in an era of booming international tourism. Memorials and monuments of the Holocaust have become part of the tourist circuit. Of course, no single person is likely to visit all sites, memorials, monuments, and museums about the Holocaust, and, even if such an expensive and time-consuming journey were contemplated, the explosive growth of newly recovered sites and frequently changing museum 1

PREFACE presentations would make full coverage impossible. This book started in 1986 as background and comparative research for an exhibition at the Judah L. Magnes Museum in Berkeley of Ira Nowinski's photographs of the George Segal monument The Holocaust. Segal's work, installed outdoors in San Francisco's Lincoln Park and indoors as a maquette at the jewish Museum in New York, raised important questions about the portrayal of history in contemporary public art as well as the comparative impact of representational sculpture. The title In Fitting Memory poses the rhetorical questions: To whose memory and how fitting? It intentionally places Holocaust memorials within their various national and political contexts. The book is based on research and photographic surveys of seven European countries: Austria, the Federal Republic of Germany, the former German Democratic Republic, France, Italy, the Netherlands, and Poland, with comparative data drawn from the Soviet Union, Israel, the United States, Canada, japan, and South Africa. The design and content of Holocaust memorials reflect national differences in historiography, ideology, and culture as well as a variety of styles and traditions of public art and sculpture. Many memorial sites reflect local events or specific aspects of the Holocaust. Despite the specificity of each site and despite national differences in perspective and emphasis, these memorials collectively preserve for posterity the public memory of Nazi mass murder. They also reflect the development of public art and memorial sculpture on four continents. These monuments, memorials, and museums have also become part of a wider international civic culture in the last 45 years. We realize that the subject of memorialization is a new field and, while the study of a number of Holocaust memorials presently under construction may modify some of our conclusions about the intersection of historical memory and political identity, we do believe that this book will help those interested in resolving the ambiguities of how to remember the past. The text, captions, bibliography, and list of memorials were written by Sybil Milton, and the site photographs were taken and developed by Ira Nowinski. Unfortunately, it was not possible to assemble a systematic biographical section on all artists whose works are reproduced in this volume, but relevant biographical data, when available, is integrated into the photograph captions. All captions contain the following information: (a) site; (b) artist's name and title of work; (c) date of design and/or installation, if known; (d) dimensions and materials; and (e) biographical data about the artist, architect, or designer, if available. Titles are given in italics if the works were titled by the artists; unitalicized titles were added by museums, memorials, or the author. All of the photographs, except for six from Italy, two from the Netherlands, and one from Long Beach, were taken by Ira Nowinski during four photo survey trips between December 1987 and September 1989. Several photographs from Nowinski's portfolio of George Segal's monument The Holocaust, completed in 1985 and exhibited in 1986 at the Judah L. Magnes Mu- 2

seum and the New York Jewish Museum, are included in this volume. The six photographs from Italian memorials were commissioned by ANED (Associazione Naziona/e Ex Deportati Politici nei campi di sterminio nazisti) and were generously made available to us. The Museum of Deportation in Carpi was photographed by the Paolo Monti Studio, Milan, and San Sabba concentration camp in Trieste by Paola Mattioli, Milan. The two photographs from Amsterdam were made by Ad van Denderen, Amsterdam. The Long Beach Holocaust Memorial Monument was photographed by jim Strong, Hempstead, New York. Although we have attempted to verify all information about the history of each memorial and monument, exact data was not always available. Whenever possible, we consulted archival documents and tried to verify information by interviewing artists, government officials, and survivors. Some information may contain errors, since research did not always yield satisfactory answers. We hope that our work will provide assistance to those who will continue to investigate this important subject. The research and text for this volume were completed before changes in the former Soviet bloc altered the political map of Europe. These changes are, however, still incomplete and it is still too early for any final analysis. Nevertheless, recent developments do show that the administration of memorials in the countries of Eastern Europe and in reunited Germany will at best transform and at worst diminish the status of most Holocaust and anti-nazi memorials. Thus, the newly installed governments of Central and Eastern Europe have fired Preface 3 the directors of many memorials and cut their professional staffs and budgets. The new regimes have, moreover, insisted that so-called anti-stalinist exhibits be erected in most memorials alongside those commemorating the Holocaust. Even before official unification, a member of the West German cabinet demanded that in the future the Buchenwald memorial should also commemorate the "German victims" of the Soviet occupation authorities (Deutschland-Berichte 26, no. 9 [September 1990]: 27). Further, the memorial in Bernburg commemorating the victims of the so-called euthanasia programs and the one in Brandenburg commemorating political prisoners were closed by the new German authorities on the day they were scheduled to open. These examples could be multiplied throughout Central and Eastern Europe. Growing popular resentment against Jews and Gypsies, hatred of outsiders, as well as the emergence of local fascist groups also bode ill for the future of these memorials. In this volume we have used the term Federal Republic of Germany (FRG) for West Germany and the term German Democratic Republic (GDR) for East Germany. Only when discussing the Federal Republic of Germany after October 1990, when it included both former West and East Germany, have we used the term "unified Germany." In the same way, we have continued to use "West Berlin" and "East Berlin" prior to October 1990, and "unified Berlin" after that date. For the same reasons-that Germany was divided for most of the period covered by the literature-we have also retained the designation FRG and GDR in the bibliography and in the list of memorials.