About The Holocaust Project
In 1985, artist Judy Chicago and her husband, photographer Donald Woodman, began a long personal journey to understand the historical ramifications of the annihilation of European Jewy. Though she is the descendent of twenty-three generations of rabbis, Chicago knew little about her Jewish heritage. She and Woodman, also an assimilated Jew, decided to incorporate Jewish ritual into their wedding. Their study with Rabbi Lynn Gottlieb in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and their exposure in 1985 to “Shoah,” the classic film by Claude Lanzmann, stimulated a long period of inquiry into the Holocaust and Jewish history that was guided by Holocaust educator Isaiah Kuperstein. They traveled for two and a half months through the “landscape of the Holocaust,” including France, Germany, Austria, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and the then Soviet Union. Later visits to Hiroshima and Israel were the culmination of their travels. Their scholarly and visual research, however, continued throughout the project.
Through the Lens of Treblinka: The Changing Relevance of the Holocaust
2:00pm Documentary From Darkness into Light: Creating the Holocaust Project
This documentary was created as part of the original touring exhibition, Holocaust Project: From Darkness to Light, that premiered in 1993. It takes you into the studios of Chicago and Woodman as they share their journey into the darkness of the Holocaust and out into the light of hope.
2:30pm Talk - Through the Lens of Treblinka: The Changing Relevance of the Holocaust
Presented by Dr. Michael Nutkiewicz