THE POWER OF RESILIENCE AND HOPE – PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE HOLOCAUST: THEN & NOW

THE POWER OF RESILIENCE AND HOPE – PHOTOGRAPHY AND THE HOLOCAUST: THEN & NOW (2024)

Robert Hirsch, Chief Curator and Producer
Ruby Merritt, Assistant Curator and Project Manager

Three locations in two parts

CEPA Gallery Part One January 20 - March 16, 2024. Part Two March 23 - May 31, 2024
CEPA Gallery, 617 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203

Mirabo Press January 25 - March 1, 2024
Mirabo Press, 11 Botsford Place, Buffalo, NY 14216

Western New York Book Arts Center January 25—March 16, 2024
Western New York Book Arts Center, 468 Washington St, Buffalo, NY 14203

 

The Holocaust was the first mass genocide to be simultaneously photographed by perpetrators, bystanders, resistors, and victims. History is left with a unique visual inventory of competing narratives and memories that curator and historian Robert Hirsch has been investigating for years.

The Power of Resilience and Hope – Photography & the Holocaust: Then and Now will feature 30 contemporary, regional, and international artists and writers whose works juxtapose and interact with archival material to create new imagery that delves into the complexities of time and space, place and memory, nature, and the devastation of civilized society.

The show aims to bridge growing divides that threaten our future with programming that inspires a cross-generational dialogue and creates a forum for artists and individuals of diverse lived experiences to come together and learn from one another with the intent of pushing back on hatred and racism. Community programming, public art, youth and adult workshops, discussion groups, and speakers will allow individuals to engage with the past as a way to inform the present and future. Community partners of the exhibition include the Holocaust Resource Center of Buffalo, the Jewish Community Center of Greater Buffalo, UB’s Department of Jewish Thought, the Clean Air Coalition of Western New York, Mirabo Press, and Journey’s End Refugee Services.

The exhibition has been in planning for many years, long before the current events began to unfold, and is intended to reject hate and promote understanding and empathy among all groups of people. With art’s ability to foster dialogue, CEPA is inviting the community to engage with the exhibition and reflect on the experiences of everyday individuals caught in the crossfire of hatred. CEPA and its partners stand against all forms of racism and violence.

 

Photograph of a man carrying a woman

©Stephen Berkman, A Wandering Jewess

 

Curator Robert Hirsch says: “Optimistically, this project makes a case why critically examining history is necessary to acknowledge how hate and trauma can be transmitted from generation to generation. In turn, this opens the possibility of applying the Jewish concept of Tikkun Olam – repairing a broken but beautiful world – to encourage acceptance, inclusion, and cooperation with Others who are different from the majority.”

The exhibition is made possible through generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), The Joy of Giving Something Foundation, Erie County Cultural Funding, the Golden and Goldman Philanthropic Fund, and numerous business and private sponsors. CEPA is supported by the New York State Council on the Arts.

 

Jason Francisco photo, Massacre site in the Janowska Street Labor camp in Lviv, Ukraine, 2014

© Jason Francisco, Massacre site in the Janowska Street Labor camp in Lviv, Ukraine, 2014

 

 

CEPA Gallery Part One  January 20 – March 16, 2024. Part Two March 23 – May 31, 2024

CEPA Gallery, 617 Main Street, Buffalo, NY 14203

Mirabo Press January 25 –  March 1, 2024

Mirabo Press, 11 Botsford Place, Buffalo, NY 14216 

Western New York Book Arts Center January 25—March 16, 2024 

Western New York Book Arts Center, 468 Washington St, Buffalo, NY 14203

 

Exhibition installation at CEPA Gallery

Exhibition installation at Western New York Book Arts Center

Exhibition installation at Mirabo Press

REVIEW

CEPA’s Holocaust exhibition: ‘I wanted to make the absence present’

 

 

 

 

 

Co-curator Ruby Merritt describes a work containing more than 2,400 faces of people killed in the Holocaust. It’s part of an ambitious new art exhibition at the CEPA Gallery.Joseph Cooke, Buffalo News

 

 

 

Buffalo News Exhibition Review, “CEPA’s Holocaust exhibition: ‘I wanted to make the absence present’”

 

 

Read the article on the Buffalo News Website: https://buffalonews.com/news/local/cepas-holocaust-exhibition-i-wanted-to-make-the-absence-present/article_8a667dfa-c1df-11ee-b52f-e7a2ea6a5f2d.html