Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated Exhibition
“Sometimes, an idea appears and the course of your life, and even your sense of purpose is altered. As a figurative narrative artist, I create stories in paint. In July 2018, as I pondered stories to tell, I became overwhelmed with the understanding of the millions who didn’t get to have a story; those whose dreams, hopes, and aspirations were horrifically eliminated in the Holocaust. I decided to concentrate on these unheard voices.”
~ LAUREN BERGMAN
• ARTIST STATMENT
“We are all possible victims, possible perpetrators, possible bystanders.” - Yehuda Bauer
Seeing racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia, and intolerance rise up in the world around us all, as I heard the voices of hate reverberating in the public square and watched bigotry rear its hideous head and march emboldened down our streets, I was reminded of a haunting warning from Holocaust historian Yehuda Bauer: “The horror of the Holocaust is not that it deviated from human norms; the horror is that it didn’t. What happened may happen again, to others not necessarily Jews, perpetrated by others, not necessarily Germans.
We have all seen tragic images of victims of the Holocaust, images that never cease to shock and horrify. Although we may be haunted by the cruelty with which so many lives were destroyed, how much do we actually know about the people whose time on earth was cut so terribly short? Is it possible that by only seeing images of their suffering we are protected from grasping just how much these people are like us? I became captivated by the remaining images of girls and young women murdered by the Nazis. The eyes in these often-unnamed faces are windows into lives that were not allowed to unfold. I contemplated their interrupted childhoods and young adult years and wondered about the stories, dreams, wishes, and life chapters torn away from these young people and felt compelled to imagine what their inner lives might have been like before they became engulfed by horror.
In creating paintings based on historic snapshots, my goal is to honor these lost lives. I hope to give back to these girls and young women something that was stolen; to remind the world that these young people once lived and loved and that they, like us, harbored dreams and hopes and secrets; that they had stories to tell. One can never know the exact dreams destroyed or hopes crushed; one cannot hear the inner narratives silenced or know how these girls might have lived out their precious lives, but in imagining what might have been, perhaps, in a small way, they can be brought back to life. Ultimately, these paintings aim to shine our light into the dark shadows of history, reminding us all that every taken life was far more than a statistic or a discarded photo. Depicting idyllic images of girls who were senselessly slaughtered is my act of creative resistance.
Through these pieces, I am saying that we cannot ever forget the real girls who suffered nor can we stand by and allow history to repeat itself.
Lauren Bergman | New York City | 1/20/19
Lauren creating Judith Gersch’s painting
• DR. DAVID M. MILCH STATEMENT
Introduction to the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated Exhibition
In July 2018, nearly a year after the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, VA, artist Lauren Bergman took the pulse of America's resurgent racism, anti-Semitism and intolerance, and conceptualized a series of narrative paintings based on historic snapshots.
Poring over images of young girls and young women murdered, Bergman envisioned breathing new life into the stories, secrets, and hops that may have moved them before horror intervened. Her idyllic scenes offer an alternative to the iconography of tragedy and suffering that often blocks us from resonation with the human faces we encounter. Set to the haunting music of world-renowned composer Ella Milch-Sheriff, this "act of creative resistance" powerfully imagines the stores of silenced voices.
This exhibition includes 6 out of 20 works from the Artist Lauren Bergman and the Composer Ella Milch-Sheriff.
LIVES ELIMINATED, DREAMS ILLUMINATED | VIRTUAL EXHIBITION
On Meeting Lauren Bergman
I first encountered the powerful works of artist Lauren Bergman on March 15th, 2019 at the Pierre Hotel in New York City. I was not prepared for the impact that Lauren Bergman’s works would have on me.
I remember my first impression that these were well-executed colorful portraits with some interesting additional elements completing the compositions. I then noticed a small black-and-white photograph, attached to the display stand, of the girl seen on canvas, and remember thinking how accurately the artist had captured the face on the photo, and how excellent her craft was. It was only then that I read the associated photo caption…”Picture made in a studio before deportation to Terezin in November 1941.”
Subsequently, I met with Lauren Bergman many times. I have come to know of her essentially secular Jewish upbringing and appreciate even more fully the way her unique artistry imbues these paintings with an extraordinary power. I was able to introduce her to my cousin, the brilliant Israeli composer Ella Milch-Sheriff, and to my wonderfully creative colleague Ohad Ashkenazi. Together the idea of an exhibition of Lauren’s portraits emerged, 20 in the full collection and all accompanied by an original composition from Ella, curated and organized by Ohad, with the assistance of other ever-helpful individuals (Phyllis, Archie, Tal, Aviv, and more), and this vision is now being realized, with further exhibition plans to come.
Our family is honored to bring this powerful experience to the attention of all who care for life, for art, and for the shared humanity that links us all together.
Dr. David M. Milch | New York City | 6/23/2020
In 2010, Dr. Milch decided to establish a foundation that would serve “tikkun olam” (healing the world) in two major areas: the the use of arts for social impact (“Ars Veritas Initiative”); and youth mentorship to help fashion the leaders of tomorrow. As a seed philanthropist, Dr. Milch has helped initiate and shape strategies for a number of new artistic initiatives, including “Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated.”
Sunflowers and Butterflies
In the below historical photo, a woman is chased by men and youth armed with clubs – Medova Street, Lviv, 1941.
The Lviv pogroms were the consecutive massacres of Jews living in the city of Lwów (now Lviv, Ukraine) perpetrated by Ukrainian nationalists from June 30 to July 2 and July 25 to July 29, 1941 during the Wehrmacht’s attack on Soviet-occupied eastern Poland in World War II.
On the morning of July 25, the Ukrainian auxiliary police began arresting Jews in their homes, while civilians participated in acts of violence against them in the streets. Captured Jews were dragged to the Jewish cemetery and the Łąckiego Street prison, where they were fatally shot out of the public eye. Some 2,000 people were murdered in approximately three days.
The historical photo used to inspire the Sunflowers and Butterflies painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR SUNFLOWERS AND BUTTERFLIES
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Edzia Littmann
The evacuation of prisoners from the Stutthof camp system began on 25 January 1945. When the final evacuation began, there were nearly 50,000 prisoners, the majority of them Jews, in the Stutthof camp system.
About 5,000 prisoners from Stutthof subcamps were marched to the Baltic Sea coast, forced into the water, and machine-gunned. In late 1945, the remaining prisoners were removed from Stutthof by sea. Over 4,000 were sent by small boat to Germany, where many drowned along the way.
The historical photo of Edzia Littman and her family used to inspire her painting.
Drohobycz, Galicia
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR EDZIA LITTMANN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Mirian Klein
Miriam was only 8 when she was murdered at Jasenovac concentration camp on July 24, 1942.
The historical photo of Mirian Klein used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR MIRIAM KLEIN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Eva Schulzová
Born July 20, 1931
Eva was transported to the Theresienstadt camp in December of 1941. In December of 1943 she was transported to Auschwitz, where she was murdered.
The historical photo of Eva Schulzová used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR EVA SCHULZOVA
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Marica Kecskemeti
Murdered 1944 at age 14 in Auschwitz.
The historical photo of Marica Kecskemeti in Nagyvarad, Romania with her parents used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR MARICA KECSKEMETI
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Anna Zakrzewska
Anna Zakrzewska served with the Polish underground army as a courier and a medical orderly.
Zakrzewska’s underground code name was Hanka Biała (White Hannah). She received training at the end of June and July 1944 in the Wyszkowa forest. She was killed in the course of desperate combat during the Warsaw Uprising, at the age of 18.
Historical photo of Anna Zakrzewska used to inspire her painting
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR ANNA ZAKRZEWSKA
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Rina Di Veroli
Born 1933
Rina was only ten when she was murdered at the Auschwitz concentration camp in 1943.
Historical photo of Rina Di Veroli used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR RINA DI VEROLI
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Esther Frederika Polak
Amsterdam 26 January 1937 – Auschwitz 29 July 1942
Reached the age of 5 years
Historical photo of Esther Frederika Polak used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR ESTHER FREDERIKA POLAK
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Bronia Milch and Fela Leifer
Bronia and her niece Fela, along with dozens of their immediate family members, died at the hands of Nazi collaborators. This took place in the tiny shtetl of Kozova in eastern Poland (now western Ukraine) in the summer and fall of 1943.
Historical photo of Bronia Milch and Fela Leifer used to inspire their painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR BRONIA MILCH AND FELA LEIFER
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Henriette Bamberg Cambridge
Daughter of Judik Bamberg
BIRTH 6 Aug 1935 – Antwerp, Belgium
DEATH 9 Jul 1943 (aged 7) – Sobibor Concentration Camp
Henriette was murdered with her mother in the gas chamber in Sobibor. She perished one month before her 8th birthday.
Historical photo of Henriette Cambridge used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR HENRIETTE CAMBRIDGE
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Emmy Stein
Born 1934
Emmy was only seven when she was murdered at Treblinka extermination camp on September 30, 1942.
Historical photo of Emmy Stein used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR EMMY STEIN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Ester Gordon
Ester Gordon perished in the Holocaust.
Historical photo of Ester Gordon used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR ESTER GORDON
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Eva Nemova
Below is a studio portrait of a young Jewish girl shortly before her deportation from Prague. Her name was Eva Nemova (b. 1937), the niece of Marta (Mautnerova) Pekova.
Eva later perished in Theresienstadt or Auschwitz.
Historical photo of Eva Nemova used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR EVA NEMOVA
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
If Wishes Were Horses
Radom Ghetto was a World War II ghetto set up by Nazi Germany in the city of Radom during the occupation of Poland, for the purpose of the persecution and exploitation of Polish Jews. It was closed off from the outside officially in April 1941.
The liquidation of the ghetto began a year and a half later, in August of 1942. It ended in July of 1944, with approximately 30,000 to 32,000 victims (men, women, and children) deported by train to their deaths at the Treblinka extermination camp.
The historical photo used to inspire the If Wishes Were Horses painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR IF WISHES WERE HORSES
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Judith Gersch
Born 1932
Judith was the daughter of Rudolph Gersch and Elisabeth Grunfeld Gersch. She was born in Deda, Mures, Romania. Judith was a pupil at a primary school. Judith and her family were transported to the Reghin Ghetto in Reghin, Mure, Romania. The family was later transported to the Auschwitz death camp. The whole family died in the gas chambers at the camp.
Historical photo of Judith Gersch used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR JUDITH GERSCH
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Katalin Kellerman
Katalin Kellerman was murdered at the Auschwitz death camp on July 7, 1944 at age 7.
Historical photo of Katalin Kellerman used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR KATALIN KELLERMAN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Mirjam Anna Bosman
Mirjam Anna Bosman was murdered in Sobibor on June 11, 1943 at age 9.
Historical photo of Mirjam Anna Bosman used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR MIRJAM ANNA BOSMAN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
She Dreams of Flowers
The Soviet Union occupied Lvov in September 1939, according to secret provisions of the German-Soviet Pact. Germany invaded the Soviet Union on June 22, 1941, occupying Lvov within a week. The Germans claimed that the city’s Jewish population had supported the Soviets. Ukrainian mobs went on a rampage against Jews. They stripped and beat Jewish women and men in the streets of Lvov. Ukrainian partisans supported by German authorities killed about 4,000 Jews in Lvov during this pogrom. US forces discovered this 8mm footage in SS barracks in Augsburg, Germany, after the war.
A still shot from a film from the National Archives used to inspire the She Dreams of Flowers painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR SHE DREAMS OF FLOWERS
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Tema Schneiderman
Tema Schneiderman, courier of the Dror youth movement and a member of the Jewish underground in the Bialystok ghetto.
Tema Schneiderman was born in Warsaw (Warszawa) in 1917. Upon the outbreak of WWII, she began her activities in the Jewish underground and became a courier for the Dror movement in Lithuania and Poland. Schneiderman carried out some twenty courier missions between Bialystok and Warsaw. On January 17, 1943, she entered the Warsaw ghetto where, the next day — during the second Aktion (mass roundup for deportation) — she and other young women were arrested and deported to the Treblinka extermination camp. She perished there.
Historical photo of Tema Schneiderman and her family used to inspire her painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR TEMA SCHENEIDERMAN
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Marcelle Bonderman
Marcelle Bonderman was from the Jewish community of Paris. She died in Auschwitz concentration camp in 1942 at the age of 10.
The historical photo used to inspire Marcelle Bonderman’s painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR MARCELLE BONDERMAN - NEED EMBED CODE
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
Anyuta Lifshitz
Place of Birth: Kiev, Ukraine
During War: Kiev (Camp), Ukraine
Place of Death: Babi Yar Murder Site
The historical photo used to inspire Anyuta Lifshitz’s painting.
ELLA MILCH-SHERIFF MUSICAL COMPOSITION FOR ANYUTA LIFSHITZ
Original music for this painting composed by Ella Milch-Sheriff for the Lives Eliminated, Dreams Illuminated: A Remembrance of Future Stories Exhibition
New Work Available
Flower Crown
The black and white image of this anonymous girl was taken by Henryk Ross in the Lodz Getto. Ross risked his life taking photos that documented life there before the ghetto was liquidated and its residents were exterminated in the death camps.
The historical photo used to inspire the Flower Crown painting.
Ruth Tobias
Born December 11, 1928
Died July 23, 1943
Reached the age of 14 years
The historical photo used to inspire Ruth Tobias’s painting.
Ruth Zimmermannova
Born February 16, 1926
Last residential address before deportation: Prague
Address/place of registration in the Protectorate: Prague I, Náprstkova 9
Transport B, no. 41; October 21, 1941, Prague to Łódź
Murdered
The historical photo used to inspire Ruth Zimmermannova’s painting.