The Occupation
After being demobilised in 1940, Jean Delpech returned to Paris. In order to support himself, he worked as a technical drawing teacher at the “Travail et Joie” youth centre in Saint-Ouen, and then, from 1943 onwards, at the “Rue de Madrid reception and screening centre for young offenders” in Paris. Teaching was hard work and poorly paid but at least it enabled him to escape Compulsory Work Service (STO). Despite his lack of means, Jean Delpech came into his own among his young pupils and showed proof of real talent as a teacher. During this period, the artist created numerous works, drawings and engravings, providing invaluable testimony to life under the Occupation. They depict food shortages, empty shop windows and the German army’s omnipresence in the streets of Paris. They also show the damage done by allied airstrikes. These works seem to have acted as an emotional outlet for Jean Delpech, enabling him to cope with the period’s anxieties. Such fears were exacerbated in particular by Jean Delpech’s underground activities, forging false papers for Jews and Resistance fighters, activities that forced him to take constant risks.
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Une gare pendant l'Occupation
Entre 1940 et 1944Une rue sous l'Occupation. Au verso, Académie d'homme par Bleynie
Entre 1940 et 1944Masques à gaz
Entre 1940 et 1945Paris sous l'Occupation : file d'attente à la poste
Entre 1942 et 1944Paris sous l'Occupation : le métro
Entre 1940 et 1944Paris sous l'Occupation
Entre 1940 et 1945Chateaubriant, café de la gare
01/1943Paris occupé
1944Les prisonniers
1942Bombardier anglais abattu sur le quai en face de Saint-Ouen
Entre 1940 et 1944La cité
1943Porte de Saint-Ouen
Vers 1943Pagination
https://collectionjeandelpech.musee-armee.fr/en/themes-collection/occupation?page=1