(Newser)
–
The
Auschwitz Memorial Museum has published a collection of death camp
sketches by a mystery inmate of Birkenau that was found stuffed in a
bottle. The chilling pencil sketches of the camp, by a prisoner who
signed them "MM," show children being torn from the arms of their
parents, and a guard smoking a cigarette as gas chamber bodies are
loaded onto a truck, reports Der Spiegel.
"These sketches are the only work of art made in Birkenau that depict
exterminations," said a museum spokesman. The sketches, made in 1943,
were discovered four years later near the camp's crematorium by a former
prisoner working as a watchman at the site.
The
artist intended the 32 sketches as a kind of documentary record, said
museum officials. Truck and car license plates, badges of prisoners,
guard insignias, and signs are all clearly depicted. "The author of the
sketchbook hoped that someone would find his work so that it would
become a witness to extermination," said an art historian. The images
were published to mark this year's 70th anniversary of the beginning of
gassings at Birkenau.


1 comments:
Amazing thanks for posting this. Imagine drawing these under those conditions and with the chance of getting caught. That is real art with a purpose. Nothing about money or fame just to keep the record of a horriable situation.
Richard Chalmers
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