Walking in his father’s footsteps
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Paul Saitowitz
On Sept. 12, 1944 the United States invaded the tiny Micronesian
island of Peleliu. The island, occupied by the Japanese, was supposed to
be a routine job for the U.S. troops, and the entire mission was thought
to scantly last more than a few days.
Two months later the five-square-mile parcel of land was littered with
20,000 dead American and Japanese bodies.
Instead of defending the beaches, the Japanese troops decided to seek
shelter in the caves of Peleliu’s rocky interior. With the Japanese
soldiers refusing to leave the caves, the Americans poured aviation fuel
within the rocky confines and set them aflame -- igniting all inside.
The battle that took place on this island is said to be one of the
bloodiest of the second world war.
One of the American soldiers that did battle at Peleliu was
20-year-old Russell Fee. The events that took place there scarred him for
life. Fee’s son James recalls his father occasionally awakening violently
in the middle of the night, brandishing a weapon and shouting “Up and at
‘em soldier.” Fee eventually committed suicide in 1972.
While on the island, Russell Fee took several photos of the carnage he
witnessed. Those photos inspired his son, who is a photographer, to
return to Peleliu several years later on a mission of “Unstructured
experiences of discovery.” After three trips to the island retracing the
footsteps of his father, James Fee put together a photo exhibit of his
experiences. The exhibit, The Peleliu Project, is on display through Nov.
9 at the Golden West College Fine Art Gallery.
Fee’s color photos of beautiful sunsets and foliage juxtaposed with
old machine guns and war remnants hang side by side his father’s tiny
black and white gelatin prints, which include dead bodies and live
action.
“I think having his father’s photos next to his gives this exhibit
multiple layers of appreciation,” gallery directory Donna Sandrock said.
“On opening night I had a Vietnam veteran tell me how much he appreciated
the exhibit and I think there is added relevance because of what took
place on Sept. 11.”
There is a dreamlike quality in Fee’s earlier work, including a series
on a Philadelphia penitentiary and several independent slices of American
life. A lot of those works are in black and white and tend to be slightly
out of focus. With The Peleliu Project, the images are sharp with
brightly contrasting colors.
“I think the sheer lushness of the tropical environment really made
the photos work a lot better in color,” Sandrock said. “It brings to life
the feeling on the island.”
Fee’s trips to Peleliu included days and days of hiking across the
island looking for war remnants untouched and in positions conducive to
photographs. While there, he stayed with some of the natives because the
island did not have a single hotel. It recently received electricity this
year, and with a hotel on the way, it may eventually become a tourism
spot.
The Golden West gallery is the only gallery besides the Craig Krull
gallery at Bergamot Station in Santa Monica to display the exhibits. The
gallery hosts about seven shows a year, Sandrock said.
“I saw one image from James, it was a shot of the Statue of Liberty
from behind her,” Sandrock said. “It made such an impression on me that I
decided I wanted his Peleliu exhibit sight unseen.”
Fee, a photo instructor at the Art Institute in Pasadena has already
published one book and is in the works to publish his photos from
Peleliu.FYI
What: James Fee’s Peleliu Project
When: Through Nov. 9
Where: The Golden West College Fine Arts Gallery, 15744 Goldenwest St., Huntington Beach.
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