Tereska and Her Photographer

Tereska and Her Photographer

Books


FA.B134.3180
2019
Ricardo Bá́ez
Russet Lederman
David "Chim" Seymour
Carole Naggar
Juan F. Mercerón
Warsaw
New York City
Hardcover fictional photobook with a hole punch through the entire book in the top right side. Silver foil stamped cover. First edition of 700 (400 English copies, 300 French copies). Includes inscription by author to CBA.

"Tereska and Her Photographer: A Story is a photobook that presents a fictional story by Carole Naggar about the extraordinary parallel lives of Magnum photographer and co-founder David “Chim” Seymour and Tereska Adwentowska, a young Polish girl who was the subject of Chim’s most famous photograph.

In September 1948, while on assignment for UNICEF to report on Europe’s children, Chim photographed Tereska at a primary school in Warsaw, Poland. Millions of readers saw Tereska’s picture when it was published in Life magazine in December of the same year, and were moved by her plight. She had received a shrapnel wound during the Wola massacre, and her image became emblematic of children’s fate during World War II. In the aftermath of the war, Chim tried to discover her full name and story. However, both Chim and Tereska met absurd deaths before ever meeting again.

Based on historical facts, Tereska and her Photographer is a fiction built as a small opera, where all the characters in Chim and Tereska’s lives bring their various voices to the narrative. They include: Tereska, Chim, Tereska’s parents (whose father was a Freedom Fighter during Warsaw’s Uprising), Doctor Stanislaw Wiktor Sierpiński (a survivor of Otwock’s massacre), Enrique Meneses, Jr. (a journalist who explored Chim and journalist Jean Roy’s deaths in Egypt), and several others. The book’s chronology is nonlinear, weaving vignettes from 1948 and the present with those from Chim’s youth and Tereska’s early childhood. David “Chim” Seymour’s photographs, along with several anonymous historical images, are inventively presented and arranged by award-winning book designer Ricardo Báez with striking typography by Juan Mercerón. PLEASE NOTE: This book has an intentional hole that runs from the front cover to the back cover. It is part of the book’s inventive design and symbolizes how David “Chim” Seymour died—shot by Egyptian military at the Suez Canal." -- Russet Lederman, English-language publisher, http://www.russetlederman.com/tereska/, accessed on November 1, 2024.