arts&life exhibits / on the cover Chaos | Control LYNNE KONSTANTIN ARTS & LIFE EDITOR Local Holocaust survivor, speaker and activist Rene Lichtman is ready to show another dimension — artist. R BRETT MOUNTAIN PHOTOGRAPHER ene Lichtman is a Holocaust survivor, a hidden child outside of Paris with a non-Jewish family. He was baptized and didn’t know he was Jewish until his mother came for him after the war. He’s the founder of a local group called Hidden Child/Child Survivors. He’s also the founder of the World Federation of Jewish Child Survivors of the Holocaust. He speaks often about the Holocaust locally — to students at Hillel Day School, to visitors at the Holocaust Memorial Center in Farmington Hills and at senior homes — and nationally. He is a natural storyteller. And he has a breathtak- ing story to tell. But Lichtman doesn’t want to talk about that. Rene Lichtman wants to tell a different story — about art. Lichtman, 80, is the subject of a one-person exhibit at the Lawrence Street Gallery in Ferndale. “Rene Lichtman: A Retrospective 1960-2018, Paintings & Collages” opened May 2 and will run through May 25, with an opening reception on May 4; a mid- month reception and artist’s talk will be held May 20. “In the Detroit community, I’m more known as a survivor and a speaker,” Lichtman says. “The art piece — nobody knows about it because it’s not Holocaust art.” But it is all connected. Lichtman was born in 1937 in Paris, where his Polish parents had fled the year before. His father, wanting to help the fight against the Nazis, took up arms for the French army. During his service, he befriended a Catholic family in Le Vert Galant, outside of Paris, who agreed to take in Rene should anything happen to him. Lichtman’s father was killed in battle. His mother gave over tem- porary guardianship of Rene to the family, who raised him, lovingly, as their own — and Catholic — while his own mother also went into hiding. TOP: Rene Lichtman in his home studio. LEFT TO RIGHT: Rene in France with his parents, Jacob Lichtman and Helen Zajdman. Lichtman’s French parents, Anne and Paul Lepage. Lichtman with his two mothers, Maman Helene and Maman Nana. 36 May 3 • 2018 jn