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‘Extremely Far and Incredibly Quiet’ Block 27—The Jewish Pavilion—Shoah: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Poland

In: Innovative Approaches to Tourism and Leisure

Author

Listed:
  • Architect Tal de Lange

    (Studio de Lange Ltd)

Abstract

In April 2010, following a competition, held by Yad Vashem-The World Holocaust Remembrance Center, on behalf of the Israeli Government, Studio de Lange was nominated to plan and design the permanent exhibition in block 27, the Jewish Pavilion at the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. The site is UNESCO Heritage since 1979. The pavilion is open to the public since July 2013. After studying the proposals for the new exhibition, we came to the conclusion that the design within Block 27 of the Polish State Museum must be suffused with two primary features: Simplicity and the Senses. This derives from the paramount difficulty of conveying—both as human beings and as Jews—what transpired during those years. As the French novelist George Perec, whose mother was murdered in Auschwitz, said: “A gap will yawn, achingly, day by day, it will turn into a colossal pit, an abyss without foundation, a gradual invasion of words by margins, blank and insignificant, so that all of us, to a man, will find nothing to say.” Our challenge was to create an exhibition that expresses such a historical event in an unpretentious, clear and accurate manner to the visitors—most of whom are young, non-Jewish, European citizens. The design process comprised hundreds of hours of discussion and contemplation, occurring during three years of consultation with the project’s steering committee, as well as with experts from the fields of architecture, art, visual communication, media, typography and cinema. We also worked with specialist engineers, who assisted with the building and preservation works in the Block, voice and sound technicians, acoustical experts and more. The results of this collaborative effort are spaces with clean, minimalist lines that impart the historical facts clearly and directly. Each space in this objectless exhibition presents its specific content differently, but all of them invoke the basic human senses so that the visit becomes experiential as well as educational. Each space has another dominant sense such as extreme quiet, strong sound and human scale video projection. Our aim was to allow visitors to absorb and internalize what they encounter over a relatively brief period of time, and depart with renewed insights regarding their own contemporary existence. The red-brick building inside the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum complex, comprising 1000 m2 spreads over two stories. Block 27 is one of dozens of other similar structures at Auschwitz, now dedicated by the Museum to relating the wartime experiences of different national groups at the concentration and extermination camp. For us, as designers of the Jewish Pavilion, it was important to maintain the original spaces inside the Block as far as possible, including keeping the windows uncovered in order to underscore the connection between the exhibition and its authentic, historic surroundings. Thus, also, in contrast to the other Blocks, the visitors’ route through the exhibition purposely concludes at its rear exit, which faces the barbed wire surrounding the camp. The “Book of Names” (designed by Prof. Chanan de Lange) is a site-specific installation that brings out Yad Vashem’s mission of collecting the name of each and every individual Shoah victim. This project, ongoing for six decades, has resulted in the recording of 4.2 million names so far—a remarkable accomplishment, but one that is not simple to impart experientially. Our goal was to create a permanent memorial to these murdered Jewish men, women and children—one that would encompass both their inconceivable numbers as well as their individual identities. Every name, birth date, home town and place of death is clearly printed on the meter-high pages, illuminated by a gentle strip of light that lies between each page. Thus one can search for, pinpoint and even touch the data of any individual victim, and thus commemorate him or her in a private, intimate and personal way. However, the monumental size of the exhibit—58 volumes of 140 pages each, 500 names per page, measuring 2 m high and 14 m in circumference, also attest to the collective, immeasurable loss to the entire Jewish people, and to humanity. The blank pages of the book's final volume, await the names still to be redeemed, recorded and memorialized in perpetuity by Yad Vashem. Credits The exhibition was created by the State of Israel and Yad Vashem, with the assistance of the Claims Conference and in coordination with the Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum. Chairman of the Inter-Ministerial Steering Committee Dr. Shimshon Shoshani Chairman of the International Advisory Committee Prof. Elie Wiesel Executive Director and Exhibition Curator Avner Shalev Project Manager Ishai Amrami Senior Curator Yehudit Inbar Historian Dr. Avraham Milgram Curator Rinat Harris-Pavis Senior Photograph Curator Nina Springer-Aharoni Film Production Consultant Liat Benhabib Research of Original Film Footage Efrat Komisar Acquisition of Original Film Footage Mimi Ash Architecture and Design Studio de Lange Ltd. – Chanan de Lange & Tal de Lange, Shirley Marco “The Book of Names” Design: Chanan de Lange Source: The Central Database of Shoah Victims' Names – Hall of Names, Archives Division, Yad Vashem Production: Information Technology Division, Yad Vashem Visual Communication Design Adi Stern, Yael Burstein, Ori Succary Exhibition Production Manager Orit Hall Construction Management Shimon Kornfeld – Tafnit Wind Ltd. Construction Firm Tomasz Francuz “Ani Ma’amin, I Believe – Prayer” Video installation: Hagit Shimoni “Jewish Life Between the Two World Wars” Multimedia installation: Niv Moshe Ben David Produced by 8ND Music: Moshe Baavour Sound design: Chen Nevo “Nazi Antisemitic Ideology” Sound design: Ishai Adar “How Jews Coped During the Holocaust” films Directed by Noemi Schory Produced by Alona Schory, Belfilms “Traces of Life,” wall drawings and voices Michal Rovner “Return to Life” Multimedia installation: Niv Moshe Ben David Produced by 8ND Photography for Online Exhibition: Niv Moshe Ben David, Pawel Sawicki

Suggested Citation

  • Architect Tal de Lange, 2018. "‘Extremely Far and Incredibly Quiet’ Block 27—The Jewish Pavilion—Shoah: Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum, Poland," Springer Proceedings in Business and Economics, in: Vicky Katsoni & Kathy Velander (ed.), Innovative Approaches to Tourism and Leisure, pages 159-166, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:prbchp:978-3-319-67603-6_11
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-67603-6_11
    as

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