Photo de l'auteur

Henryk Ross (1910–1991)

Auteur de Henryk Ross: Lodz Ghetto Album

3+ oeuvres 28 utilisateurs 1 Critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Henryk Ross was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1910, becoming a sports and general press photographer in Lodz before World War II. As a Jew, he was incarcerated in the Lodz ghetto by the Germans where he became one of two official photographers, producing identity and propaganda photographs for its afficher plus Department of Statistics. His duties afforded him access to film and processing facilities and he used these to create a record of the ghetto, risking his life to secretly document the deportations, hangings and other atrocities. As the Germans began the liquidation of the ghetto in 1944, he buried his archive of 3,000 negatives and other ghetto records for safekeeping. Surviving the Holocaust (as a member of the ghetto clean-up squad intact at the time the Red Army liberated Lodz), he was able to recover the archive after the war. From his post-war home in Israel, where he worked as a photographer and zincographer, he circulated images showing the horrors of Lodz, including in his 1960s book The Last Journey of the Jews of Lodz and at the trial of the Holocaust-mastermind, Adolf Eichmann. He catalogued his photographs in 1987. Ross died in Israel in 1991. afficher moins

Œuvres de Henryk Ross

Oeuvres associées

Journal du ghetto de Lodz : 1939-1943 (1960) — Photographe — 177 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom canonique
Ross, Henryk
Date de naissance
1910-05-01
Date de décès
1991
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Poland
Israel
Lieux de résidence
Lodz, Poland
Tel Aviv, Israel
Professions
photographer
sports photographer
photojournalist
Holocaust survivor
Courte biographie
Henryk Ross was born Henryk Rosencwaijg to a Jewish family in Poland. Prior to World War II, he worked as a photojournalist and sports photographer for Polish newspapers. He was serving in the Polish Army when Nazi Germany invaded his country in 1939. He was confined to the Łódź Ghetto, and, like Mendel Grossman, worked in the Department of Statistics for the Jewish Council, taking official photos for identity cards. At the risk to his own life, he also took forbidden photos documenting the brutal everyday life in the Ghetto and Nazi atrocities. When the Łódź Ghetto was being liquidated in 1944, Ross buried his photos and negatives in barrels and jars. He and his wife were among the few hundred Jews were kept behind by the Germans as a clean-up crew. They survived until the Red Army liberated the Ghetto in January 1945. About half of Ross's 6,000 buried images also survived. After the war, Ross had his own photography studio in Łódź, before emigrating with his wife Stefania to Israel in 1956. In 1961, he testified at the trial of Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem. Ross published a collection of his photos, The Last Journey of the Jews of Lodz, in 1962. His photos have been exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and numerous other museums worldwide.

Membres

Critiques

These were some very affecting photographs, many of which have never been published anywhere else. Best of all, however, was the introduction. I had never given much thought before to the photograph as a historical record, and I hadn't realized that a photo, even if not altered, can be distorted and misrepresented just as much as any other historical source. Definitely food for thought.
 
Signalé
meggyweg | Oct 29, 2010 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
3
Aussi par
1
Membres
28
Popularité
#471,397
Évaluation
½ 4.3
Critiques
1
ISBN
1