PolishOrigins Forum

 FAQFAQ    SearchSearch    MemberlistMemberlist    ProfileProfile    Log in to check your private messagesLog in to check your private messages    Log inLog in    RegisterRegister 
Author
Message
Slav
PolishOrigins Team


Joined: 26 Sep 2010
Replies: 172
Location: Warsaw, Poland

Back to top
Post Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2012 6:45 pm      Post subject: Pre-WW 2 negatives showing people from the Lublin area
Reply with quote

It's a recent discovery and most people in the photographs haven't been identified yet, but it is a phenomenal collection.
Its custodian is Brama Grodzka Centre, a Lublin-based cultural and educational institution.
Here is how they describe this collection:

Faces of the non-existent town

Given the scale of destruction visited on the Jewish town and the entire Lublin, it might seem that no meaningful traces of life in the pre-war Polish-Jewish city can be found any more. However, after many years, from a dark hiding place arranged in the attic of a house in Lublin, there emerge the faces of the city’s inhabitants photographed on glass plate negatives before the outbreak of the war. It is because of these faces, captured in sharp focus, that the photographs are so powerful.

Basic information about the Collection
In May 2012, the “Grodzka Gate – NN Theatre” Centre received a collection of glass plate negatives found in the house at Rynek 4. The collection consists of more than 2700 glass plate negatives in various sizes: from 6x9 cm to 13x18 cm. The photographs were taken between 1914 and 1939. The collection was found in the attic of the house by workmen doing repairs. The negatives were secured, cleaned, sorted and scanned by Krzysztof Janus, supervisor of the repair work. Then the owners of the house handed over the collection for a 10-year deposit to “Grodzka Gate – NN Theatre” Centre.

SCANS OF ALL NEGATIVES ARE AVAILABLE AT:http://www.negatywy.teatrnn.pl

Description of the Collection
The pictures show people, individuals and groups, usually in an indoor or landscape setting, e.g. the interior of the house at Rynek 4 or the Saxon Garden.

Various people appear in the photographs: children and adults, women and men, sitting or standing, with characteristic objects such as a newspaper or badge in the lapel. Photographs of another kind show people at their places of work: individuals or groups representing certain professions. Most of them are tailors, but there are also clerks at their desks. A lot of the portraits show soldiers; some of these pictures were taken in a hospital.

Yet another kind are family photographs documenting social events or major events in the life of a family. These pictures were taken both inside apartments as well as outdoors, e.g. in front of country cottages. In the group photographs identified, you can see the football section of the Morgensztern club, the teachers and students of the Jewish school of the Koach Society in Lublin, and the firemen from Trzciniec and Wola Sernicka.
Although people are the main them of the collection, the photographer also captured an important event in Lublin’s history, the opening of the Yeshiva in 1930. This event is documented with 25 photographs.
Pictures taken probably at the New Jewish Cemetery in Lublin (and one in Wieniawa) are interesting from the documentary perspective. The photographs show gravestones, in some cases with people standing nearby. All the names on the gravestones have been read, and they include: Maria Arnsztajnowa née Peretz (mother-in-law of Franciszka Arnsztajnowa), Bronisława Gerensztajnowa née Logwińska, Sara Fryda Horn, Chaim Israel Fridman, tzadik Magid Admor Jaakow Ari, Rachela Blum, Batszewa, daughter of Aszer Zelig Horowitz, brother of tzadik Admor the Seer of Lublin, Riwka Mitzenmacher, Mosze Breber, Dow Bromels, Rachela Lea Herszenwald, Jehoszua Falik, Chaim Szlomo Tzwi, Risza Rozenbojm. There are 36 photographs showing gravestones.

Only a small number of photographs have inscriptions, and it appears that they were taken not only in Lublin but also in Nowodwór and Nałęczów (handwritten inscriptions). The location can be identified thanks to the signs visible in the photographs as is the case with the firemen from Wola Sernicka and Trzciniec. On several photographs showing soldiers in a hospital, on the white gowns you can see the stamp of District Hospital No. 2 in Chełm.

On a number of photographs there are handwritten initials, probably of the individuals appearing in the pictures: S. Elsenstark, Anna Koniger, I. Soberbaum, S. Zyserman, A. Lederfarb, R. Szajtman, J. Feldman, R. Hepsztejn, R. Wajsman, Jan Borowski, Otwinowska, Melzak, Bilot (or Bilet), Maciej Szirociński, Ch. Frajldlich, Z. Urman, Akerman. One name - Mincman - appears twice.

The photographs also show people working in the field or building a road and bridge, a brickyard, races on a river, a religious ceremony outside a church. You can see vehicles: a fire engine, a rack wagon, a cart, a steam engine.


Author of the Collection
The photographer has not been identified at this stage of research. Archive records do not mention any photographer’s studio in the house at Rynek 4. The author of the pictures could have worked in a studio located somewhere else. The photographer could have been Jewish.



Technique
The photographer has not been identified at this stage of research. Archive records do not mention any photographer’s studio in the house at Rynek 4. The author of the pictures could have worked in a studio located somewhere else. The photographer could have been Jewish.

The negatives are glass plate negatives (dry plate developed by Maddox in 1871), mostly in sizes 9x12, 10x15 and 13x18 cm, and mostly produced by Agfa and Alfa (a Bydgoszcz-based company). The negative show traces of retouching done with pencil on the emulsion side and of local colouring done with neo-coccine, a strong, transparent red dye for enhancing contrast or lightening the image on the negative. The negatives prepared by the author of the collection are placed in a film cassette in the darkroom, and then they can be transported and exposed with the need to use a plein-air laboratory.


Project contact person:
Joanna Zętar
Tel.: 81 53 258 67
e-mail: [email protected]

SOURCE: http://teatrnn.pl/leksykon/node/3383/collection_of_glass_plate_negatives_from_the_house_at_rynek_4



NNtheatre-wedding.jpg
 Description:
A wedding photo
 Filesize:  80.18 KB
 Viewed:  5024 Time(s)

NNtheatre-wedding.jpg




Last edited by Slav on Sat Aug 18, 2012 2:02 pm; edited 8 times in total
View user's profile
Send private message
Shellie
PO Top Contributor & Patron


Joined: 18 Feb 2009
Replies: 998
Location: Atlanta, GA

Back to top
Post Posted: Wed Jul 11, 2012 8:46 pm      Post subject:
Reply with quote

Slav,
Thanks so much for posting this. I just spent the past hour pouring over just a small fraction of this collection. There seem to be a large number of photos of non-Jewish people, so there is definitely something for everyone here.

I was very intrigued by the photo showing a young soldier, Jan Borowski, lying in a coffin. It makes me want to know more about his life, and his death. Did he die on the battlefield? Did he leave behind a young widow? Did he have children who had children who are interested in their family history?

Anyone who enjoys vintage photos will really enjoy viewing this collection.
View user's profile
Send private message
Slav
PolishOrigins Team


Joined: 26 Sep 2010
Replies: 172
Location: Warsaw, Poland

Back to top
Post Posted: Thu Jul 12, 2012 3:44 am      Post subject:
Reply with quote

Yes, Shellie, non-Jewish people also appear on the photographs. The collection is unique because it shows people from villages around Lublin.

There are many questions that have yet to be answered: Who took the pictures? What happened to the photographer(s)? Who hid the photographs in the attic?

The house was just outside the ghetto established by the Nazis during WW2. Actually, you can see the house in Google StreetView, it's the one in the middle, with the Caffe sign: http://goo.gl/maps/5yTV
View user's profile
Send private message
Display posts from previous:   
Post new topic   Reply to topic    PolishOrigins Forum Index -> Poland and its people in old photographs and postcards All times are GMT - 5 Hours
Page 1 of 1

 
Jump to:  
You cannot post new topics in this forum
You cannot reply to topics in this forum
You cannot edit your posts in this forum
You cannot delete your posts in this forum
You cannot vote in polls in this forum
You cannot attach files in this forum
You can download files in this forum


Powered by phpBB ©

© 2009-2024 COPYRIGHTS BY THE OWNER OF POLISHORIGINS.COM