Friday, December 23, 2011

Grunt's eye view of war

Grunt's-eye view of War
Exhibit captures unfiltered images of life on the battlefield
by: Chris Bergeron
MetroWest Daily News
December 22, 2011
In 1950, an ambitious, 19-year-old photographer from Coney Island, N.Y., Harold Feinstein, was drafted into the U.S. Army after war broke out in Korea.
Following basic training, he was shipped to South Korea where he spent the next seven months snapping photos of fellow recruits dozing in their bunks, reading comics and waiting in line in the drizzling rain. Feinstein's 21 black-and-white prints convey the mid-century innocence of the Boy Next Door sent to fight in a foreign land.

"We were all innocent kids," says Feinstein, who now lives in Merrimac. "I had my 35 mm Leica with me all the time. Taking pictures has been my whole life."More than six decades later, Feinstein's sharp-eyed images of the tedium and camaraderie of military life are showcased in "Grunts: The GI Experience," an exhibition that reveals the ordinary men inside the uniforms, at Panopticon Gallery in Boston.  His grunts are fresh-faced teenagers, probably away from home for the first time, hanging out with buddies in the barracks, doing pretty much what they'd have been doing back in Any Town, U.S.A. Drafted just two years after President Truman integrated the military, he photographed white and black soldiers sharing the democracy of identical uniforms, bad haircuts and bland chow.

Organized by Jim Fitts, this involving show ambushes familiar stereotypes about the military and shoots down misconceptions about the men serving in it. An educator and curator, Fitts has complemented Feinstein's Korean War photos with 32 photos, including three by Robert Capa, of World War II combat, front-line soldiers and portraits.  Taken mostly by unnamed photographers of the Acme Photo Service and Army Signal Corps, the World War II photos document in gritty, black-and-white images combat's impact on American soldiers, civilians and, in a few cases, the enemy.

Coming on the 70th anniversary of Pearl Harbor and the sesquicentennial of the Civil War, this thoughtful approach reminds viewers these fresh faced and hard-bitten grunts were our grandfathers, dads and uncles and the solitary man, wearing badges in his cap, in the coffee shop.  Panopticon owner Jason Landry says the photos in "Grunts" capture without pretense or contrived artfulness the intimate moments of ordinary men behind the lines or between battles.  He included photos of his grandfather Joseph Landry and father-in-law Ralph DeVito in their World War II and Korean War uniforms to emphasize the ubiquitous service of citizen soldiers in modern wars. All photos, except of Landry's relatives, are for sale.

Located in the second floor of Hotel Commonwealth in Kenmore Square, the exhibit in Panopticon Gallery runs through Jan. 10.  Fitts says he was "blown away" on first viewing Feinstein's photos which had only been "exhibited sporadically" in the area in recent decades.  He notes Feinstein belonged to the prestigious Photo League as a teenager in New York and was an experienced "street photographer" who had collaborated with W. Eugene Smith and discussed his work with pioneering photographer Edward Steichen and even sold him some pictures.  "Harold was aware that photography was an art and he had the eye of an artist," says Fitts.  Despite Feinstein's experience, the Army did not assign him to be a military photographer probably because the Photo League was considered a left-leaning organization at the time Sen. Joseph McCarthy was claiming communists had infiltrated the Army.  Assigned to be a graphic artist, Feinstein had the freedom to take "unfiltered" photos of Army life that "officially sanctioned" photographers didn't dare shoot, says Fitts.

Feinstein shot "unpretentious photos that revealed innocence, an absence of bravado and the closeness" of young men away from home, he says.  "One reason Harold's photos were so important was they were among the first images of the newly integrated Armed Forces. Blacks and whites lived and served together without differentiation.  When the GIs he photographed went home, they were the ones who kick-started the Civil Rights movement."  Don't look for Hollywood heroes in Feinstein's photos.  Rather than charging up Pork Chop Hill, GIs in his photos kill time in their bunks, board troop ships en masse or grab a goodbye kiss from a girlfriend in a stylish hat.

In "Mail Call," a mixed race group of soldiers waits anxiously for word from home, enviously eyeing a kid who's already got a letter. Sitting on his bunk, a black soldier peruses a "Blondie" comic book.  In "GIs Lounging," four soldiers cat nap on a bench, resting their heads on one another's shoulders. Can you imagine John Wayne snuggling up to Forest Tucker in "Sands of Iwo Jima?" The more than 30 World War II photos by Capra and unknown wire service and military photographers chronicle the grimmer - and more familiar - realities of men at war.  The baby faces of Feinstein's grunts are now covered with scruffy whiskers. The cozy barracks have been replaced by devastated European and sodden Pacific landscapes.

Instead of lazing about with a comic, they push howitzers through bombed-out cities, squat behind machine guns and, when lucky, smooch with willing French damsels.  Considering they were taken mainly by "sanctioned" photographers in a war yet to be won, many cast the "dog faces" - as they were then known - as the very good guys, rescuing children, pets and democracy.  In one revealing pairing, a photo of a captured Nazi U-Boat captain with perfect Teutonic features is juxtaposed with a photo of a dirty but smiling GI giving a Japanese kid a piggy back ride.  Like other soldiers, Feinstein eventually shipped home. He documented several decades of life on Coney Island, taught photography at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester and pioneered the use of kaleidoscopic lens for a Life magazine article on New York City architecture.

Since 1998, he has broken new ground as one of the first photographers to use a scanner as a camera for seven popular books of pictures of flowers.  Now 80, Feinstein says his professional credo has been "to bear witness" to the all-too-common horrors and everyday miracles of war and peace.  He might be describing all the named and unnamed photographers in "Grunts."