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Book cover of Icon of Loss: The Haunting Child of Samuel Bak
Religion & Art, Art Styles & Periods, Jewish Studies, Jewish History, Art by Subjects

Icon of Loss: The Haunting Child of Samuel Bak

by Danna Nolan Fewell, Danna Fewell, Destiny Barletta (Editor), Maritza Medina
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Overview

"There is no known vocabulary that can describe what Samuel Bak has created here. It is almost beyond mere metaphor to say that his hand is driven by some divine force. Never before has pity been so twinned with outrage, or visionary image-making with unforgiving historical fact." -Cynthia Ozick In this examination of Samuel Bak's most recent collection of paintings inspired by the little boy from the famous Stroop Report photo taken in the Warsaw Ghetto in April 1943, Gary A. Phillips and Danna Nolan Fewell consider the historical and visual implications of this iconic image and its contemporary evocations. A survivor of the Vilna liquidation and a child prodigy whose first exhibition was held in the Vilna Ghetto at age nine, Bak weaves together personal history and Jewish history to articulate an iconography of his Holocaust experience. Bak's art preserves memory of the twentieth-century ruination of Jewish life and culture by way of an artistic passion and precision that stubbornly announces the creativity of the human spirit.

Synopsis

"There is no known vocabulary that can describe what Samuel Bak has created here. It is almost beyond mere metaphor to say that his hand is driven by some divine force. Never before has pity been so twinned with outrage, or visionary image-making with unforgiving historical fact." -Cynthia Ozick In this examination of Samuel Bak's most recent collection of paintings inspired by the little boy from the famous Stroop Report photo taken in the Warsaw Ghetto in April 1943, Gary A. Phillips and Danna Nolan Fewell consider the historical and visual implications of this iconic image and its contemporary evocations. A survivor of the Vilna liquidation and a child prodigy whose first exhibition was held in the Vilna Ghetto at age nine, Bak weaves together personal history and Jewish history to articulate an iconography of his Holocaust experience. Bak's art preserves memory of the twentieth-century ruination of Jewish life and culture by way of an artistic passion and precision that stubbornly announces the creativity of the human spirit.

ZEEK: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture

The figures in Bak's work remind us not just of what was done, but also of what was lost. Rather than merely confront the viewer they have a tendency to haunt him, long after they have ceased to be seen.

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Editorials

Jewish Book World

To many, the paintings of Samuel Bak represent the Holocaust. Not only are they beautifully painted in an Old Master style, but their images of Holocaust devastation and tragedy are moving and unforgettable. Many of us are familiar with the photograph of a young boy in the Warsaw Ghetto, arms raised in surrenderβ€” his innocence violated by a German SS pointing a gun at him. Although this particular child happened to survive, Bak uses his image in a series of paintings to represent all the children of the Shoah, most of whom perished.

ZEEK: A Jewish Journal of Thought and Culture

The figures in Bak's work remind us not just of what was done, but also of what was lost. Rather than merely confront the viewer they have a tendency to haunt him, long after they have ceased to be seen.

Book Details

Published
September 1, 2009
Publisher
Pucker Gallery
Pages
100
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781879985216

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