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Auschwitz exhibition depicts death camp survivor's trauma

"David Olere: The One Who Survived Crematorium III," shows the extermination process which took place at Auschwitz during the Holocaust through the late painter's own eyes.

by  Reuters and Israel Hayom Staff
Published on  11-01-2018 00:00
Last modified: 06-10-2019 09:49
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A man looks at a painting during the opening of an exhibition featuring works by David Olere

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David Olere, a former Auschwitz prisoner who helped dispose of bodies at the Nazi death camp, depicted his trauma of the horrors he witnessed in haunting drawings and paintings.

Now more than 80 of those artworks have gone on display at an exhibition at the Auschwitz Memorial in Oswiecim, Poland.

"David Olere: The One Who Survived Crematorium III," shows the extermination process which took place at Auschwitz during the Holocaust through the late painter's own eyes.

A painting by former Auschwitz prisoner David Olere depicts a monstrous Nazi guard and a Jewish man in the striped concentration camp uniform Reuters

A French Jew of Polish descent, Olere was part of a special unit of male Jewish prisoners, dubbed the Sonderkommando, chosen by the Nazis to discard the bodies of those killed in gas chambers.

"He is the only witness who documented this unimaginable cruelty in the form of paintings and drawings," Agnieszka Sieradzka, an art historian at the Museum Collections and one of the curators of the exhibition, said in a press release.

Born in Warsaw in 1902, Olere studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in the Polish capital before eventually settling in Paris. He was arrested in 1943 and deported to Auschwitz, one of several concentration camps operated by the Nazis on Polish soil during the Holocaust in which some 6 million Jews were killed.

Marc Oler, David Olere's grandson, attends the opening of an exhibition featuring works by his grandfather Reuters

His grandson Marc Oler described the artist, who died in 1985, as "very, very tough, very, very talented, very, very traumatized."

"David Olere wanted the next generation to be aware so they could be … [spared] the horrors that he had been through and know peace," Oler, who attended the exhibition's opening on Tuesday, said.

The exhibition, which runs until March, displays its own collection of Olere's artwork as well as many others on loan from the Yad Vashem Holocaust memorial in Israel and France's Mémorial de la Shoah.

Tags: artAuschwitzHolocaustHolocaust survivorNazi Germanypainting

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