Painter, muralist, and printmaker Fanny Rabel was born Fanny Rabinowich in Lublin, Poland. After spending several years in Paris, she immigrated to Mexico in 1938 and took night classes in drawing and printmaking. In 1942, Rabel began studying at the National School for Painting and Sculpture in Mexico City and started working relationships with painter Frida Kahlo and muralist Diego Rivera. Rabel found inspiration while studying under Kahlo and gained experience in mural painting when she assisted Rivera with his 1948 murals at Mexico’s National Palace. Rabel became a member of the Popular Graphics Workshop and the Mexican Salon of Fine Arts, producing a diverse range of expressive works in print and on canvas.
In view of the wide divergence of opinion and of the conflicting ideas prevailing in Judaism today, we, as representatives of Reform Judaism in America, in continuation of the work begun at…
This drawing of a gathering hosted by Dr. Hermann Adler, the chief rabbi of Great Britain (wearing a yarmulke and standing at right), represents the adaptation of the British custom of high tea to the…
The new Rabbi pleased everybody, because he was beyond all doubt a righteous man. I was then a boy of twelve. My father received two letters from Rabbi Yukel on the subject of a good match for me in…