: - On the first day of the Nuremberg Trials in November 1945, 21
major Nazi officials took their seats in the rear of the draped
and dark-paneled room of the Palace of Justice to face their
indictments.
The moment marked the first time that an International Military
Tribunal (IMT) would call for an individual accounting of and
punishment for conspiratorial and criminal actions committed
against the Jews and others before and during a war. In Nuremberg
to record the scene, and so many others during the subsequent
months, was 26-year-old Army photographer Raymond D'Addario of
Holyoke, Mass.
Now a selection of his images can be seen at the Mount Holyoke
College Art Museum from February 3 until March 28 in "Witnessing
the Nuremberg Trials: Photographs by Raymond D'Addario."
D'Ad-dario, who still lives in Holyoke where he continued to work
as a photographer, and guest curator Liz Sommer, assistant
curator of art at the Springfield Library and Museum Association,
will be at the museum for a gallery talk on February 19 at 4 pm.
A reception will follow.
It was D'Addario's job, as chief of a handful of Army
photographers receiving the assignment to Nuremberg, to prepare
news coverage for the war crimes trials. He observed on a daily
basis - from November 1945 until October 1946 - the two rows of
defendants, including Hermann Goering, Rudolf Hess and Joachim
von Ribbentrop, making them forever part of the historic record.
His stirring images, which have been distributed worldwide in
magazines, books and newspapers, also capture the judges and
prosecutors from the four victorious nations, the defense, and a
variety of witnesses as well as the almost total devastation of
Nuremberg itself by the Allied Forces before the end of the war.
Despite the IMT's restrictions against the use of flash bulbs in
the courtroom, D'Addario's imagery, mostly in black and white, is
outstanding.
"They are amazing, moving, fascinating photographs of a trial
that continues to generate discussion more than 50 years later,"
said museum director Marianne Doezema. "The detailed evidence
presented at Nuremberg without doubt forever recorded the ghastly
atrocities committed against humanity in Europe. Certainly, the
Nazi leaders were punished. But the trials did not end wars of
heinous aggression, and sadly have not put an end to genocide, as
evidenced most recently with atrocities perpetrated by leaders in
the Balkans and Iraq. Mr D'Addario's images offer a sober
reminder of lessons our world must never forget."
The Mount Holyoke College Art Museum is open Tuesday through
Friday, 11 am to 5 pm and weekends, 1 to 5 pm, and is fully
accessible. Admission is free. For information, visit
www.mtholyoke.edu/go/ artmuseum/ or call 413-538-2245.