Synagogue in Subotica

Marcell Komor

Jakab Dezső

1901–1902

Image
Photograph of building exterior with rounded roofs

The synagogue in Subotica (today in Serbia), is the second-largest synagogue in Europe and a rare existing example of an art-nouveau synagogues. Its interior features elaborately glazed ceramics and art-nouveau paintings. According to the official history of the synagogue, Marcell Komor and Jakab Dezső’s design was first submitted to a committee charged with commissioning the design for a new synagogue in Szeged, but it was rejected as too radical. But their design found favor with the Jewish community in Subotica, and construction on the synagogue began there in 1900.

Credits

Tibor Bognar / Alamy Stock Photo.

Published in: The Posen Library of Jewish Culture and Civilization, vol. 7.

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