Double sided sketch of a farmer drawn by Ossip Lubitch in Drancy internment camp
Extent and Medium
overall: Height: 3.875 inches (9.843 cm) | Width: 5.375 inches (13.653 cm)
Creator(s)
- Ossip Lubitch (Subject)
- Ossip Lubitch (Artist)
Biographical History
Ossip Lubitch was born in Grodno, Russia (Hrodna, Belarus) in 1896. He studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Odessa from 1915-1919. He moved to Berlin, Germany, in 1920 and joined a group of Russian artists, including Pavel Tchelitchew and Lazare Meerson, designing film and stage sets. In 1923, he obtained a contract to decorate a cabaret in the Montmartre district of Paris. He set up a studio in Montparnasse and immersed himself in the study of the masters, such as Rembrandt, Goya, and Degas, and focused on the art of drawing. Ossip became known as a member of the School of Paris. In 1925, he was accepted into the Salon des Tuileries by Antoine Bourdelle. Cirque, an album of ten aquatints and etchings was published with a prefatory poem by Georges Roualt. In May 1940, France was invaded by Nazi Germany. France capitulated in June and the northern region, including Paris, was under German occupation. Jews were ordered to register with the German authorities, but Ossip did not comply. In July 1944, he was denounced by his neighbors because they wanted the studio space. They did not report him as a Jew, but as a friend of Jews. He was arrested and held all day in a jail where he could hear other prisoners being tortured as their interrogators sang a nursery rhyme: Il court, il court, le petit furet (He run, he runs, the ferret.) He told the police that he was a Jew and was sent to Drancy internment camp. He had stuffed some paper and a pencil in his pant pockets before he was taken from his studio and he began sketching the daily life of internees at the camp. He worked digging ditches during the day and sketched at night in the barracks. Ossip walked out of Drancy in mid-August 1944 when the German soldiers guarding the camp fled due to the approach of Allied Forces. Ossip returned to his studio in Paris which the concierge had prevented anyone from entering. Paris was liberated on August 25. Not long after that, he married a young painter named Suzanne Bouldoire, born 1926. They had a daughter in 1950. Ossip, 94, died in 1990.
Archival History
The drawing was acquired by the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in 2004.
Acquisition
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection
Funding Note: The cataloging of this artifact has been supported by a grant from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany.
Scope and Content
Two sided drawing of a man farming with a hoe and wheelbarrow and a study of a head created by Ossip Lubitch who was imprisoned in Drancy internment camo in France in 1944. After the German occupation of Paris in the summer of 1940, Jews were forced to register with the authorities. Ossip did not register and was eventually denounced by his neighbors. He was arrested in July 1944 and sent to Drancy internment camp. He walked out of Drancy in August when the German soldiers guarding the camp fled as the Allied forced approached and returned to Paris.
Conditions Governing Access
No restrictions on access
Conditions Governing Reproduction
Restrictions on use
Copyright Holder: Suzanne Lubitch
Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements
Double sided pencil drawing; on the front is an outdoor scene of a man working with a hoe near a wheelbarrow. On the reverse is a study of a head in profile. The artist's signature is in the lower right corner.
People
- Lubitch, Ossip, 1896-1990.
Corporate Bodies
- Drancy (Internament camp)
Subjects
- Prisoners--France--Drancy--Biography.
- Jewish artists--France--Biography.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945)--France--Pictorial works.
- Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), in art.
- World War, 1939-1945--Concentration camps--France--Pictorial works.
Genre
- Object
- Art