Escapes from horror An exhibit of art by inmates of Auschwitz comes to Wayne State By Rebecca Kavanagh The Holocaust was evil to the extreme. During World War II, millions of men, women and children were sent to concentration camps in Nazi-occupied Europe. Those who were too young, too old or too ill for labor were marched to the gas chambers without ever being registered, without ever being counted. Those who survived the selection process faced a fate that was perhaps worse than death. Terror raged throughout the camps: inhumane conditions, backbreaking work, humiliation, starvation, punishment, torture, execution. And still, in the midst of that horror, the human spirit prevailed. represented in this exhibit," says Mike Smith, archivist for the Jewish Community Archives at Wayne State's Walter P. Reuther Library. "It is an honor that Wayne State was selected as one of the chosen venues in the United States." When visitors come to St. Andrew's on the WSU campus during the Sept. 7-28 exhibition, they will encounter several drawings — ranging from heavily detailed to hauntingly sparse — portraying everyday "I have no idea," says survivor Emery Klein, who was 15 when he joined his brother and father at Auschwitz-Birkenau. While imprisoned there and at Gleiwitz, Klein saw no evidence of art being made or hidden from SS guards. "It is simply unbelievable. But we tried all kinds of things to keep our minds from what was happening." Liberated in February 1945, Klein eventually moved to the Detroit area and worked to serve its Jewish community. In 2006, he and his wife, Diane, were honored for their volunteer efforts with the Jewish Federation's most prestigious tribute, the Fred M. Butzel Award. The 84-year-old Farmington Hills resident intends to visit the Forbidden Art exhibit while it's on the Wayne State campus. He appreciates its educational value, having spent so much time himself speaking to schoolchildren and other audiences about his experiences. "I feel it's important for people to know what happened, and what can happen. This tragedy must not be repeated." There is proof of that in Forbidden Art, an exhibit coming to Wayne The stark exhibit allows for solitary contemplation of each piece. Artist State University in September and historical details lend context to the artwork. featuring artwork created by That's exactly the intended prisoners of Nazi concentration message, says Wayne State's camps. life in the camps as well as prisoner Smith, who in addition to coordinating the likenesses. Some of the drawings were WSU stop has helped arrange logistics for The powerful exhibit originated at Poland's found near Auschwitz's gas chambers the other locations. The team worked with Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum in late and include killing scenes. Others show American universities to reach students and 2011 and is now traveling to four U.S. an escape from reality, with caricatures new audiences beyond those at traditional locations. It spotlights 20 photographs of and fairy tales that inmates wrote for their Polish and Jewish centers. The idea was to artwork made illegally and under the threat children. Also featured are small sculptures increase the exposure to those who may be of death. Historical details and excerpts and jewelry. less familiar with the Holocaust narrative. from archival accounts accompany each photo. Mystery surrounds the very existence of Matthew Seeger, dean of Wayne such art. How could starving, exhausted State's College of Fine, Performing and "While imprisoned in horrible conditions prisoners find not only the necessary Communication Arts, says Forbidden Art is by the brutal Nazi regime, artists continued materials but also the time, strength and a unique opportunity to make important to produce the works of art that are energy to create beauty of any kind? images accessible to students and the community at large. The Department of History, the Department of Art and Art History, and various Jewish Studies courses will likely study the exhibit this fall. A panel discussion called "Who Owns Art? The Holocaust, Ethics and Cultural Patrimony" is among the scholarly programming planned. Forbidden Art Exhibit details Sept. 7-28, 2012 Thursday-Friday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday-Sunday noon-4 p.m. St. Andrew's Hall Wayne State University 918 Ludington Mall Detroit, MI 48202 Free and open to the public. 3 The famous gate to Auschwitz I, built in 1940, the administrative center of a network of concentration camps operated by the Third Reich in Poland. cont. on page 7