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FRANCE - PHOTOGRAPHY
German occupation photo exhibit causes scandal
Tuesday 22 April 2008
A controversial new photography exhibit entitled, “Parisians Under Occupation" shows scenes of daily life that contrast sharply with the reality of the German occupation from 1940 to 1945. (Report : J. André)
Tuesday 22 April 2008
By Ségolène Allemandou / FRANCE 24A new photography exhibition, “Parisians Under Occupation" at the City Hall Library in Paris features 250 color photographs by French photographer André Zucca taken for the Nazi propaganda daily, “Signal”. On display from March 20 to July 1, the show has set off alarms in French intellectual circles.
Under a clear blue sky in the summer of 1942, a smiling woman in sunglasses lounges in the Luxembourg Gardens. At outdoor cafes or in pleasantly illuminated interiors, life seems quite rosy in wartime Paris. These unedited images, taken by a 24/36 Leica, were taken between 1942 to 1945, the height of the German occupation. The absence of any explanation about the propaganda element in the exhibit is striking.
Most of the photos contrast sharply with the history books recalling the Vel d'hiver roundup and deportation in July 1942. Where are the snaking lines outside food stores? Where are the witnesses of the occupation? Rare are the photos where a yellow star sewn on coat lapels is seen on passers-by. This unexpected take on "German France" does not leave one indifferent.
“We should stop this exhibit!”
WIthout questioning their beauty, the photos are disturbing. Even worse, the very title of the exhibit is rather shocking, due to its inaccuracy. Christophe Girard, the Parisian deputy mayor in charge of culture, is quite clear. “We should stop this exhibit!” Girard, an elected representative in the district where the photos are on display, was quoted saying to the French weekly newspaper, the Journal du Dimanche. “Frankly, it’s unbearable. All this digusts me."
Girard saw the exhibit on its opening night in March. “I was so ill at ease that I had to leave the opening,” he explains. “But if one had clearly explained that these were propaganda photos, the exhibit could have been very interesting.”
Interesting maybe. Sensitive, certainly. The exhibition has now become a thorny issue for officials. Should it be maintained? Did passions flare inside city hall? Christophe Girard, who declined to respond to FRANCE 24’s questions, is said to have apologized for his sharp words.
The heritage bureau of the Paris mayoral office, which works under the supervision the city's cultural services, is sticking to its guns. “Independent commissioners, [including film-maker Jean Baronnet], approved the show and the historian Jean-Pierre Azéma was involved in its organisation.”
A spokesperson from the Paris city hall is also making some clarifications. "Of all the photographs certain shown in the exhibit, not one of them was published in the Nazi magazine." The photographer, André Zucca (1897 – 1973), was a war correspondant for France Soir in 1939, and was called by the Germans in 1941 to work on the propaganda magazine "Signal". This bimonthly, available in occupied countries, reserved its color stock for battle photography, not civilian life. At Liberation, André Zucca was denied a press card and could no longer work as a journalist.
Paris mayor Bertrand Delanoë says the incident was “badly managed”, and is trying to put things right. He preferred not to ban the exhibit to avoid accusations of censorship, but removed the posters advertising the show. Organisers are also planning a debate titled “Is the camera an objective witness?” in a last-minute attempt to correct their early mistakes.
Paris Under Occupation : André Zucca. Bibliothèque historique de la Ville de Paris, 22, rue Malher, 4th arrondissement. Tel.: 01 44 59 29 60. Open every day except Monday 11h to 19h. Through July 1st .
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27/04/2008
Zucca's view of Occupied Paris
Par Marilyn Z. Tomlins
Allow me, a 'foreigner' (English but born in South Africa and living in Kremlin-Bicetre) to say that this exhibition, far from being closed down, should be prolonged so that those from the provinces and also people from other countries who will be visiting Paris this summer, would be able to view Zucca's pictures also. I am a writer and researcher and having spent the past four years researching and writing a book on the WW2 murderer, Dr. Marcel Petiot ('A Life In Quicklime' currently with London and New York publishers while my agents, Fiona Lindsay and Mary Bekhait of 'Limelight Management' is also trying to attract French publishers), I know not all Parisians behaved like those on Zucca's photos: there were very many extremely brave people here in Paris and I'm not talking of the Resistants now, but the ordinary man-in-the-street. But a nation that cannot live with its past has a dire future. Therefore, Zucca's vile pictures must be exhibited so that there will never be another foreign occupation of France. What the organizers of this exhibition did wrong was not to make it clear right from the exhibition's opening day that Zucca was a 'collabo'. I would suggest to President Sarkozy that portfolios of Zucca's photos are handed out to schools because his work is the very best example of treachery.
Marilyn Z. Tomlins, Kremlin-Bicetre
24/04/2008
I Agree Wholeheartedly
Par Anonyme
As a 59 year old who was born just a few years after the end of the war, I am constantly surprised and shocked at what you all had to endure during that awful time and after. In the United States as in France there are people who do not believe the horrors ever happened or they choose to belief that those horrors represented the correct way to live. Thank you to the writer who put my thoughts on paper. I agree with you. It would have been so simple to change the title of the exhibition and recognize the propaganda aspect. (I am saying this without benefit of having seen the photographs and I am trusting that the writer's description and the photo above are truly representative of the content). Thank you for letting me share this emotional reaction to the story. Sincerely, A Woman from Connecticut USA