Exhibition
Grunts: The GI Experience

Harold Feinstein Cigarette Break, 1952 Courtesy the Artist and Panopticon Gallery

Lt. Wayne Miller Lawrence Britton lookout duty, aboard USS Nassau, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, 1943 Courtesy The Fitts Collection

Robert Capa Saludos Amigos, Palermo, Sicily, 1943 Courtesy Lee Gallery, Winchester, MA

ACME Photo Yanks Learn Fast!, France, 1944 Courtesy Lee Gallery, Winchester, MA

Harold Feinstein GI in Draftee Photo Booth, Kilmer, 1951 Courtesy the Artist and Panopticon Gallery

ACME PHOTO Museum Exhibits Work by Navy Photographers, 1945 Courtesy Lee Gallery

Harold Feinstein Line for the Barracks, 1951 Courtesy the Artist and Panopticon Gallery

Harold Feinstein Four GI's Asleep On A Bench, 1952 Courtesy the Artist and Panopticon Gallery

Harold Feinstein Rack in Barracks, 1952 Courtesy the Artist and Panopticon Gallery
“Grunts” is military vernacular for United States Army or Marine foot soldiers, the mass of devoted men and women who make up the bulk of the armed services. Commemorating the 70th anniversary of the bombing at Pearl Harbor, Panopticon Gallery presents Grunts: The G.I. Experience curated by Jim Fitts.
Fitts met a number of grunts while living in Hawaii in the early 90's, which piqued his interest in the subject. A boxing fan, he regularly attended matches at the Scofield Barracks at Fort Shafter where he befriended several Marines. It was then that he realized his impression of what their lives were like was rather different from reality. “Over the years, I have rarely seen what I would consider an unfiltered, real life photographic portrayal of military personnel ”...scenes of everyday life", says Fitts. "This exhibition will come as close to the reality of the grunt experience as I have ever seen."
Harold Feinstein’s friendship with the New York Photo League founder, Sid Grossman, resulted in him not being ranked as an official armed serviced photographer. Therefore, he documented his experience from the viewpoint of a fellow G.I. serving in Korea. Feinstein's photographs show draftees being inducted, soldiers on troopships, reading, sleeping and marching. The body of work also contains images of the historical integration of the armed services.
A selection of vintage photographs by Robert Capa and numerous press photographs from WWII compliment Feinstein’s images. The pictures are memoirs of the common American soldier during WWII. The majority of these images focus on the happenings between battles, though some illustrate combat.
Images in Grunts, are not repeatedly produced heroic propaganda. They are “personal and very human,” says Fitts, who hopes viewers will gain a better understanding and appreciation of the courageous soldiers.
Grunts: The GI Experience curated by Jim Fitts
On view through January 10, 2012
Panopticon Gallery
Hotel Commonwealth
502c Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
Links
http://www.panopticongallery.com
Contributors

