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Portraits of a fellow concentration camp inmate by Esther Lurie

Object | Accession Number: 1995.A.0989.9

Two portraits of the same woman drawn by Esther Lurie, 1976 recreations of a drawing she created while both women were prisoners in Leibisch slave labor camp. It was exhibited and published soon after the war in 1945 in her book, Jewesses in Slavery. Esther, originally from Liepaja, Latvia, settled in Palestine in 1934. She was visiting her sister in Kovno (Kaunas, Lithuania] in summer 1941, when it was occupied by Germany. She was confined to the ghetto and had to create portraits and paintings for the Germans. She also, at the request of the Jewish Council, dedicated herself to recording the daily life of the residents. In July 1944, the ghetto was liquidated. Esther was sent to Stutthof concentration camp, where she continued to draw. Her family members were sent to Auschwitz and murdered. In August 1944, Esther was deported to Leibisch, and liberated by the Soviet Army on January 21, 1945. During the journey back to Palestine, she lived in a displaced persons camp in Italy, where her drawings of Leibisch were exhibited.

Artwork Title
Portrait of a Woman, Leibisch concentration camp, 1944
Series Title
Jewesses in Slavery
Date
creation:  1976
depiction:  1944
Geography
creation: Tel Aviv (Israel)
Language
English
Hebrew
Classification
Art
Category
Drawings
Object Type
Drawing (lcsh)
Credit Line
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Esther Lurie
 
Record last modified: 2023-05-31 06:51:14
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn61212