Connecticut-born sculptor Elbert Weinberg began studying art as a teen, attending night classes at the Harvard Art School and continuing his studies at the Rhode Island School of Design. He earned the prestigious Prix-de-Rome in 1951. Drawing early inspiration from mythological and biblical narratives and later turning to more modern themes, Weinberg worked primarily in wood and bronze. His career took off when a trustee of New York’s Museum of Modern Art bought one of his figurative sculptures; art dealer Grace Borgenicht then arranged a commission for Weinberg from the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C. More commissions followed, including for the Jewish Museum in New York and the Boston University School of Law.
The minimalist aesthetic of the House of the Book, a chapel and conference hall, matches other buildings designed by Eisenshtat, a leading American synagogue architect. While he often favored…
Joseph ben Issachar Süsskind Oppenheimer was a financier and court Jew who served as adviser to Duke Karl Alexander of Württemberg. Economic reforms enacted by Karl Alexander (and informed by…
In 1920 and 1921, Broderzon, the guiding force of Yung-yidish (Young Yiddish), a literary and artistic group he co-founded in Łódź, published over half a dozen books of poetry and plays. Prolific and…