TOP: Birkenau Bunks Diorama, wood, metal, foam and fabric installation. Haunted by the faces of men in their bunks in several famous photographs, Gendelman wanted to show the empty barracks he had seen, but with people. To allow viewers to “feel the horror,” he says, or put themselves in the inmates’ place, he used his own image on each man. LEFT TO RIGHT: Birkenau Barracks Memorial 1, oil on canvas. A chimney at Auschwitz-Birkenau. Portal, Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Poland. Josef Ber Bruckenstein, Son of Israel Iser shows the grave site and stone, in Yiddish, of Gendelman’s great-great-grandfather, Bolekhiv, Ukraine. vice with the U.S. Department of State and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. The topic, “American Diplomacy and the Holocaust: The Roots of Hatred Explained in History and Interpreted in Art,” will com- municate personal and broader perspectives. “This is a complicated exhibit because it’s meant to be a powerful statement about genocide and the Holocaust in particular,” says Gendelman, who has seen other exhibits at the Holocaust Memorial Center during periodic business trips on behalf of Bruce Gendelman Insurance Services. “My works are meant to convey a message about there being limited numbers of people remain- ing who suffered through the Holocaust — and the remembrance has to continue. I hope that others who view it will have a gut emotional feeling that will jolt them into thinking about the viability of the Jewish people.” Because these European travels left Gendelman with a heavy heart, he wanted to convey the weighty feeling by developing enormous canvases, as wide as 12 feet, with hundreds of pounds of oil paints. He used trowels instead of paintbrushes to emphasize that trowels were used by slave laborers to build structures of death. “I read a lot about the Holocaust, but I wasn’t over- whelmed until I saw firsthand the scale of Birkenau and the other sites,” Gendelman says. “The barracks and the facilities go on for acres. I took pictures of the chimneys, and they became symbols in the paint- ings.” The photographs show Krakow, Auschwitz II-Birkenau and Tuchow in Poland as well as Bolekhiv and Lviv in Ukraine. The paintings, completed with a mix of darkly somber colors and brightly colored Van Gogh-esque details, include four Birkenau Barracks Memorials, which portray the chimneys that remain part of the landscape; Dom Katolicki, which details remnants of the building where the artist’s ancestors were tortured; three Birkenau Deathscapes, which depict Gendelman’s own nightmares after the trip; and Aerial View of Birkenau, which conveys the industrial design of the horrific places. “I’m hoping that the methods used to create the art and having a visual interpretation would add a medi- um that can reach younger people who don’t have the historical context,” Gendelman says. “Using the art doesn’t require words or reading for younger, less knowledgeable viewers to become engaged. I think that is one of my motivating factors.” continued on page 40 jn January 18 • 2018 39