The Glass Plates of Lublin features selections from the 2,700 glass
photographic plates discovered in the attic of a nineteenth-century
apartment building in the former Jewish section of Lublin, Poland.
Taken between 1913 and 1930, they capture the teeming life of
Lublin before the war, at a time when Jews composed a third of the
city's population. The images include Jews and Poles, children and
the elderly, young lovers, workers, athletes, and everyday people
who posed for a camera long ago never dreaming that their portraits
would one day be of interest to anyone. Unearthed in 2010, the
plates have been restored and are now exhibited at the Grodzka Gate
- NN Theatre Centre in Lublin, where curator Piotr Nazaruk and his
staff continue to work assiduously to identify their subjects and
solve the mystery of the photographer who took them. For centuries
Lublin was home to one of Europe's most distinguished Jewish
communities. These portraits, which date from around 1913 to the
1930s, showcase the diversity of the city and its Jewish community.
In them we see signs of different political parties and members of
various social classes; the construction and opening of the
Yeshivat Chochmei Lublin, soon to be the largest yeshiva (Talmudic
academy) in the world; and groups of left-wing and secular Jewish
youngsters, such as members of Bund-affiliated youth groups. The
images show the changes in prewar fashions, which reflect
increasing Jewish secularization. Many of the pictures were taken
in the Saxon Garden, Lublin's "Central Park", and in the nearby
villages and towns of Nowodwór, Motycz, and Na??czów, where
Lublin residents used to go for vacation. In the years since this
remarkable find, the collection has been thoroughly researched and
analyzed. For years, no connection could be made between any known
photographer and the negatives. In 2015, Jakub Chmielewski, then an
associate of the Center and currently a researcher at the State
Museum at Majdanek, discovered a new clue. In German documents from
August 1940, he found an entry on the house at Rynek 4, along with
the name "Abram Zylberberg" and the annotation "photographer".
Chmielewski's discovery was the first, and still the only, serious
indication of the negatives' authorship. The discovery was later
confirmed when one of the plates was found bearing the signature
"Photo Zylberberg. Lublin".
General
| Imprint: |
White Goat Press
|
| Country of origin: |
United States |
| Release date: |
March 2022 |
| Editors: |
Aaron Lansky
• Piotr Nazaruk
• Lisa Newman
|
| Dimensions: |
254 x 286 x 20mm (L x W x T) |
| Format: |
Hardcover
|
| Pages: |
136 |
| ISBN-13: |
979-89-85-20692-0 |
| Categories: |
Books
Promotions
|
| LSN: |
XL3-M18-KGU-5 |
| Barcode: |
9798985206920 |
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