Remington. Baltimore, MD. 2023.
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Jade Fountain, Duluth, MN, October 2022
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Puy-de-Dôme, France, 2021
Romain Saccoccio
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📸 Nikon P300 📍 Kuala Lumpur
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Caves in the Banal Woods, Fayl-Billot, Champagne region of France
French vintage postcard
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Richard Ehrlich
(HA 33), from the Holocaust Archives Series, Bad Arolsen, Germany, 2007
inkjet on paper
20 in. x 16 in. (50.8 cm x 40.64 cm)
Ruth Chandler Williamson Gallery, Scripps College
2009.3.2
The International Tracing Service (now the Arolsen Archives) houses over 16 miles of deportment lists, labor reports, artifacts, and myriad other documents maintained by the Nazi regime. Initially searchable only upon the request of victims, in 2007 the LA-based surgeon and photographer Richard Ehrlich was the first person granted permission to document the repository. Ehrlich’s photographs capture the overwhelming scale and systematic monotony of shelves upon shelves, echoing Hannah Arendt’s famous characterization of the Eichmann trial as a “banality of evil.” Arrangements of confiscated personal effects point to lives severed from family photographs and other markers of identity
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Skate + Destroy. San Angelo, Texas. 2022.
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📍Brancaster Beach, Norfolk
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