Liberation of Bergen Belsen
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Eric Wilfred Taylor

When British soldiers entered the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp they were confronted with the horror that the Nazi retreat had left behind.

Inside were tens of thousands of starving prisoners, masses of unburied corpses, the living “mingled in with the dead”.

Eric Taylor, an artist from London, was there to witness the devastation. What he saw went on to inspire a series of paintings of figures and scenes from the camp, nine of which are held in our collection.

The paintings distinguish individuals from the wider horror. Taylor returned to his studio from the front and worked from sketches he’d made, documenting the anguished stares and fragile figures he had encountered.

One painting, A dying Hungarian Pianist includes an inscription, a quote from the subject: “I am glad you are recording what they have done to me”.

The series as a whole evokes the paradox of ‘liberation’. Jews were only in the camps liberated by the Allies because of the death marches that drove them from the east and away from the advancing Red Army. Perhaps a third or more of those in concentration camps by January 1945 were dead by the end of the war. And liberation did not bring reprieve for those too ill or malnourished for freedom to be of any use.

Another painting, A Merciful Death at Belsen Concentration Camp, shows a skeletal figure shrouded in dark cloth. Below the title is a handwritten inscription, “the unbelievable horror of Belsen was beyond human understanding…”. Perhaps what was most incomprehensible were the lives lost even after the arrival of Taylor’s regiment.

Taylor failed to secure a role as an official war artist; indeed, his son has noted the war was a “rude interruption” in his fledgling career as a painter. However, the committee supervising war artists was interested in his work, and after his return from Germany he put a great deal of effort into creating final versions of the drawings he had made.

His son also noted that perhaps due to his position as an ordinary soldier he was in a better position to record the brutality and chaos he witnessed, an experience the artist himself later described as “shattering”.

The paintings in our collection were donated following a retrospective exhibition in Huddersfield. Several of Taylor’s drawings from Belsen, as well as other works, can be found in the University of Leeds’ Special Collections and the Imperial War Museum’s War Artist Archive.

We have recently catalogued our collection of artworks, codifying them as their own important class of sources within the archive. This will allow our artworks to inform future research and be displayed as part of future exhibitions and outreach activities, including a planned exhibition of this series of works to mark the 80th anniversary of the Liberation of Belsen next year.

By Samantha Dulieu, Press and Communications Manager

Eric Wilfred Taylor
1909 – 1999
Unit: TBC

Ed. Possible match:
Name Eric Taylor • Regiment Royal Artillery • Military Unit 63 Anti-Tank Regiment
Service Number 14557692 (All unconfirmed)

Printmaker, painter and sculptor, born in London and educated at the William Ellis School, Hampstead, 1928-32. He studied sculpture part-time at Central School of Art with John Skeaping and in 1932 was awarded a British Institution Scholarship and decided to use this to study at Royal College of Art where he was significantly encouraged by Sir William Rothenstein. After early art school training worked as a freelance artist doing anything and everything, from Radio Times illustrations to murals in London stores he was in 1935 Elected Associate of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers. During the period 1936-39, he was a visiting tutor at Camberwell School of Arts & Crafts and Central School of Arts & Crafts, London. In 1937 he was a winner of First Prize International Print Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago and at the outbreak of World War II he volunteered for the army and served six years in Royal Artillery and Royal Engineers, participating in Normandy landings, Battle of Caen, Battle of Falaise Gap, Crossing of the Rhine and the liberation of Brussels.

Liberation of Bergen Belsen

He was invited by War Artists Advisory Committee under Sir Kenneth Clark to submit war pictures and was the first British artist into Belsen concentration camp. Following the cessation of hostilities, he was given a large shipping office building in Lubeck on the Baltic coast to establish an art school for the three services. By 1948 he was elected a Fellow Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers and the following year he accepted a post at Leeds College of Art. He was Head of the Design School, 1949-56, and Principal, 1956-69 and ultimately Assistant Director of Leeds Polytechnic 1969-71. In 1957 Taylor became President of Leeds Fine Artists Club.

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This archive has been established after my own relative, Reg Price, took part in the liberation and subsequent humanitarian effort of Bergen Belsen in April 1945. Reg produced this famous sign at Belsen. As part of the 113th DLI, Reg and his comrades were at Belsen for 5 weeks and left when the last hut was empty and ceremonially burnt down. This archive compiles all available resources to build a lasting tribute to all the men and women who helped - any unit, any nationality. If you have a relative, or any info, on the relief effort at Belsen, we’d love you to please get in touch. Email us: liberator@belsen.co.ukThank you Nick Price CreativesFacebookTwitter