Unspeakable, the artist as witness to the Holocaust
Imperial War Museum

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Doris Zinkeisen

'The shock of Belsen was never to be forgotten. First of all was the ghastly smell of typhus. The simply ghastly sight of skeleton bodies just flung out of the huts.'

Doris Zinkeisen
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Doris Zinkeisen, Human Laundry, Belsen: April 1945. A number of wooden tables line the room depicted in this painting. Emaciated figures sit on each of the front three tables. Each of these figures is being washed by a man or woman dressed in a white uniform. A metal bucket stands at the foot of every table, and a woman is seen walking out of the room carrying a bucket in either hand.
Human Laundry, Belsen: April 1945
oil, Imperial War Museum
Doris Zinkeisen, Belsen: April 1945. The central image of this painting is a pile of emaciated corpses lying on the ground. Their limbs are splayed and their clothes barely cover their bodies. They lie in a mound against a dark, abstract background.
Belsen: April 1945
oil, Imperial War Museum
Doris Zinkeisen
Autobiographical Text, 1981
Imperial War Museum

Doris Zinkeisen was born in 1898 and together with her sister Anna studied at the Royal Academy Schools in London. She was a well-known society painter and exhibited at the Royal Academy and the Royal Society of Portrait Painters. She also designed costumes and stage sets for the theatre throughout her career.

During the Second World War, she joined the St John Ambulance Brigade and in 1944 was commissioned by the Red Cross to paint the work of doctors and nurses in north-west Europe. Zinkeisen arrived at Belsen in April 1945, just after the liberation.

Doris Zinkeisen died on 3 January 1991.

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