San Diego High School Student Curates Holocaust Exhibit and Presents at International Holocaust Commemoration Event for David Labkovski Project

SAN DIEGO (Press Release) — The David Labkovski Project (DLP) creates a living bridge from the lessons of the Holocaust to the realities of today’s world. The DLP introduces and preserves the legacy of the Holocaust experience through the artwork of world-renowned artist David Labkovski (1906-1991). His work empowers participants to engage in curated multi-disciplinary projects, involving components of collaboration, creativity, critical thinking, historical knowledge, mediation, and problem-solving.

Left to right: Student curator Amalia Abecasis, Shalhevet High School; Leora Raikin, David Labkovski Project Founder & Executive Director; and student curator Rebecca Leeman as docents at the DLP Exhibit “Documenting History Through Art,” a traveling exhibit installed at Chapman University, Leatherby Library from 2019-2022 for the Holocaust Art & Writing Contest. Credit: David Labkovski Project.

The student-curated exhibit that Rebecca Leeman co-curated, “Visual Diary of the Past,” inspires youth to become advocates for Holocaust education. Students engage with the art to understand the Holocaust, discrimination, hatred, and form deep and meaningful connections with the artist and the history.

Rebecca Leeman, a San Diego high school student at Torah High who completed the David Labkovski Project student docent training program and went on to complete the student curation program with six other high schools students from around the U.S., shared, “The David Labkovski Project has forever changed my view of art and the Holocaust. Previously, I was unaware of how a piece of art and its colors, brush strokes, and features could tell a story. Teaching the history of the Holocaust through the lens of art adds another dimension of emotion, connection, and understanding to the events of the past. I would have never known about the culturally rich town of Vilna or the horrors of the Gulag without the DLP and David Labkovski sharing every stage of his life story through his artwork. His paintings are an enriching and lasting tool for bearing witness to, and learning about, the Holocaust. I hope to share the work of David Labkovski with many others in order to promote awareness and understanding of this crucial part of our history.”
For Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) 2022, Rebecca Leeman took the hundreds of participants at the virtual event through the exhibit “A Visual Diary of the Past,” along with her co-curator, Amalia Abecasis from Shalhevet High School in Los Angeles, which was curated with five other high school students from throughout California — all who completed the DLP student docent training program and went on to graduate from the DLP student curation program. Each of these young curators brought their own skill-set to the table and collaboratively came together to explore this difficult history.
As a graduated student docent, Rebecca had the opportunity to take hundreds of students through the David Labkovski Project exhibit, “Documenting History Through Art” at Chapman University, in the Leatherby Library for Chapmans’ Annual Holocaust Art and Writing Contest. She shared with students and teachers artwork created by storyteller David Labkovski that enables us to teach Holocaust history in a way that personally speaks to our students and participants. Labkovski painted simple identifiable people, events, places, and times. There are bustling markets and towns, tradesmen, farmers, families, joy, and purpose in his pre-Holocaust life. Soldiers, prisoners, isolation, separation, dread, and fear are present in his artwork depicting his years in a Soviet Gulag prison camp. Silence, shock, abandonment, and despair at seeing the bombed out ruins of his hometown are present in the Holocaust’s aftermath. And finally, there is beauty, hope, and peace present in his later years, away from the nightmares of his own past. History becomes accessible and therapeutic, not through statistics, vast theories, battles, or metaphorical comparisons, but through one person’s lens of what it was like to live through difficult times. History now becomes time travel: a living bridge from the complicated times of the past into our own time period.

Labkovski’s artwork is a diary of his own life, beginning with the images of his youth, and continuing up to the time and place in which he died. He painted what was going on around him. He painted the people he knew and saw, the familiar landscape around him, and daily life in the places he lived.

Engaging student populations and making history relevant to them can be challenging. Navigating the present is overwhelming enough for students, and the prevalence of social media only adds to that burden. History, with all of its themes, lessons, and perspectives, however important, may seem irrelevant in the midst of everyday struggles. Founder & Executive Director of the DLP, Leora Raikin, believes that art is a powerful tool to bridge the past and present and is a universal language that transcends culture and background.

The primary source, the over 400 pieces of artwork created by storyteller David Labkovski, enables us to teach Holocaust history in a way that personally speaks to our students and participants. Labkovski painted simple identifiable people, events, places, and times. There are bustling markets and towns, tradesmen, farmers, families, joy, and purpose in his pre-Holocaust life. Soldiers, prisoners, isolation, separation, dread, and fear are present in his artwork depicting his years in a Soviet Gulag prison camp. Silence, shock, abandonment, and despair at seeing the bombed out ruins of his hometown are present in the Holocaust’s aftermath. And finally, there is beauty, hope, and peace present in his later years, away from the nightmares of his own past. History becomes accessible and therapeutic, not through statistics, vast theories, battles, or metaphorical comparisons, but through one person’s lens of what it was like to live through difficult times. History now becomes time-travel: a living bridge from the complicated times of the past into our own time period.

Labkovski’s artwork is a diary of his own life, beginning with the images of his youth, and continuing up to the time and place in which he died. He painted what was going on around him. He painted the people he knew and saw, the familiar landscape around him, and daily life in the places he lived.

But, that was not to be his lot. The circumstances of his life have provided us with a visual bridge spanning life before the Holocaust, through the misery of the Nazi and Soviet regimes, through the aftermath of the Second World War, and finally, to peace and a rebuilt life in Israel.

Labkovski happened to be born in Lithuania, a small country in between Poland and Russia. He grew up in Lithuania’s capital, Vilna, which was one of the great cultural and educational Jewish centers of the day. That his work happened to chronicle his life within a soviet forced labor camp provides a visual diary of his torture under the Russians as a prisoner in the Siberian Gulag.

His works are one man’s cataloging, not of the grander world around him, but of what was right in front of his face: the individuals with whom he had contact and among whom he grew up.

His works are not a collective accumulation of the sentimental raptures of pre-Holocaust life, or of the metaphoric tropes of horrifying evil and the oppression of the victims of the Soviet and Nazi regimes. His works do not feel like they are trying to “make a point” about the horrors of carnal evil or of the heroism of the downtrodden. He stuck to his work-a-day “ordinary” scenes of the people and places around him, and he profoundly captured the folklore, structure, and whimsy of pre-Holocaust life. His work never screams about the brutality and hopelessness of Soviet prison camps. He simply created images of what he saw during his prolonged incarceration, thereby giving the world achingly personal images of a horrible palace: the claustrophobic encroachment of brick prison walls, the individual prisoners around him, resigned and fearful, yet hopeful, and the fragile life-affirming connections forged in the camps through shared hardship and the need for immediate companionship.

Labkovski was a genius when it came to portraiture. His self-portraiture and drawings of the people around him add to the appeal of his work and is an essential part of why his work connects with viewers of all ages, backgrounds, religions, and ideologies. For many people, it is much easier to empathize and relate to the experiences and journey of one man’s life than it is to emotionally connect with 6 million people, or to deeply understand the sufferings of “all eastern European Jewry.”

Labkovski’s artistic leanings led him into the byways and storefronts of his beloved hometown of Vilna, one of the epicenters of Jewish culture and education in the early 20th century. The peddlers and cobblers of his youth and the open markets and storefronts of his hometown were the equivalent of that Facebook friend who lets you know what they had for dinner last night.

The DLP uses his artwork as a vehicle to educate and engage students, but most importantly, to empower students to educate their peers. Many of the students become advocates for Holocaust education at their schools and some go on to become ambassadors and mentors to future cohorts.

Student Aviva Medved stressed the importance of understanding history, stating, “In order to create a brighter future for us all, we have to understand our history. This experience helps people take that first step, which is extremely valuable. It doesn’t matter who you are or what your background is — I believe everyone can learn from Labkovski’s story.”

Another student and graduate of the DLP Student Docent Training Program and co-curator of the exhibit, Aliza Lam, added, “When I began working with the David Labkovski Project, I never knew about the mass killings happening in the Ponary forest. I knew about the millions of people killed by the Nazis, but never quite understood the horrific extremes the Nazis went to. This is just one example of a gap in my understanding of the Holocaust that the DLP filled. Learning about the Holocaust, not through numbers or writing, but in art, gave me a new and more powerful understanding of the tragedy. While I knew these issues were critical to discuss, I was held back by my shyness and my introverted personality. However, by participating in the DLP’s Student Docent Training Program, I now feel equipped with the tools to communicate these difficult topics. I have used these skills to work with other amazing curators to make an accessible and interactive website to tell Labkovski’s story and the story of the Holocaust.”

Amalia Abecassis, a co- curator from Shalhevet High School in Los Angeles, said, “The David Labkovski project has enabled me to gain a new perspective of the Holocaust through the lens of David Labkovski’s artwork. To be a docent in the DLP means being able to understand David’s personal experience and being able to dissect and describe his works of art. This includes understanding the composition of his pieces and its details in order to fully comprehend David’s motives in constructing the art. I believe that students should join the DLP so that they too can learn about David’s experiences and be able to gain the tools necessary to understand how to read a piece of artwork. I am currently a Docent in the DLP’s training program, and I participated in the Reflect and Respond Program. I also contributed to the David Labkovski website where my role was to create interactive images of David’s artwork using a software known as Thinglink. This interactive feature allows viewers to click through different icons which will lead them through an interactive tour of David’s artwork.”
Applications for the next National Student Docent Training Program are open at https://www.davidlabkovskiproject.org/docent-training-program-2022.html. For more information, please contact info@davidlabkovskiproject.org.
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Preceding provided by the David Labkovski Project