Become a Member
Life

Roman Vishniac Rediscovered

This exhibition at the Jewish Museum and Photographers’ Gallery is a dark mirror of our own time

November 5, 2018 15:17
Mara Vishniac Kohn (Photo: International Center Of Photography/The Jewish Museum)
2 min read

In November 1933, Germany brought into effect the Schriftgesetz, an editorial act forcing anyone working in publishing, including photographers, to supply proof of Aryan heritage. It became forbidden for Jews to take photographs on the street. Russian-born photographer Roman Vishniac, first given a camera for his seventh birthday in 1904, was undeterred.

In one shot (Berlin, 1933), Vishniac’s young daughter Mara acts as the apparent focus of the picture, while on the wall behind her a large political poster for Hindenburg and Hitler reads, ‘The Marshal and the Corporal: Fight with us for Peace and Equal Rights.’

A group of children play casually on a Berlin street. In the background, fluttering from a building, a flag emblazoned with a swastika.

Children, in contrast with their relative powerlessness in real life, are astonishingly powerful in photographs. Their unselfconscious charm – the way they stare unabashed into the camera lens – and their vulnerability draw us in. One of the most poignant prints is that of Sara, under-nourished, sitting up in bed in a basement dwelling in Warsaw. On the wall behind her we see some flowers painted there by her father. This glimpse of an attempt to bring a small spark of joy to wretched conditions somehow serves to make it even more unbearable.