Related Twilights: Notes from an Artist’s Diary
Name of traveller
Josef Herman (1911-2000)
Reason for travel
- Polish refugee from Third Reich
Date of travel
1944-55
It was in 1944, either a June or a July day, I can no longer remember, but I vividly recall the heat of that afternoon and how deeply I was struck by the quiet of the village around me. There was hardly a soul to be seen. In the distance, low hills like sleeping dogs and above the hills a copper-coloured sky – how often I later returned to the colour and mood of that sky! (Herman 73)
Content
- art: produces many of his iconic miners portraits during that time; portraits are members of the community
- customs:
- engages with and becomes part of the mining community of Ystradgynlais
- acquires nickname 'Joe bach' (Little Joe)
- participation in evening gatherings in local pub
- compares the close community of Wales favourably to cosmopolitan London and Paris
- terrain:
- links landscape and mythology
- remembers the Carpathian mountains of his native Poland and compares them with Wales
- transport: arrives in Wales having first travelled to Brussels, Glasgow and London after leaving Poland in 1938
Nationality of traveller
Polish
Language of publication
English
Gender of traveller
Male
Type of publication
diary
Citation
Herman, Josef. Related Twilights: Notes from an Artist’s Diary. 1975. Ed. Tony Curtis Bridgend: Seren, 2002. Print.