Hitler portrait as dart target, 1944
A framed Hitler portrait serves as an informal dartboard for Allied soldiers—a common form of distancing from the enemy in the daily life of war in 1944.
55,00 € plus VAT.
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Jack Lieb captured everyday scenes behind the front lines in 1944 with his private Kodachrome camera. Using a Hitler portrait as a target was a widespread ritual among Allied soldiers and correspondents—an act of gallows humor and symbolic opposition. Such scenes are among the informal peripheral moments in Lieb’s film that document the spirit of daily life in the field between the Normandy landing and the advance through France.
