Born and raised in London to the affluent businessman Joseph and Helena (Lichtenstadt) Solomon in a family of twelve children, Solomon Joseph Solomon studied to be an artist at the Royal Academy Schools in England and throughout continental Europe. Returning to London, he became a well-regarded portraitist like his sister Lily Delissa Joseph, gained fame for dramatic scenes from the biblical and Greek mythological tradition that foregrounded both male and female nudes in realistic and erotically charged modes, and became a pioneering illustrator for the burgeoning genre of adventure fiction. In 1896, he became one of the first Jewish members of Britain’s Royal Academy of Arts. During World War I, Solomon played a leading role as an innovative advocate for and designer of camouflage for the British army. His manual The Practice of Oil Painting and of Drawing as Associated with It (1911) remains a popular instructional work.
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…
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Mr. Beringer, whose son
fell at the Canal that strangers dug
so ships could cross the desert,
crosses my path at Jaffa Gate.
He has grown very thin, has lost
the weight of his son.
That’s why he…
In the Terezin concentration camp, before a visit by the International Red Cross and the Danish Red Cross in 1944, the Nazis created an elaborate ruse, designed to convince the delegation that the…