This Torah crown from Suriname was made originally in Amsterdam by Evert van Heerdan (active 1644–1683). It is a fine repoussé piece exemplifying the mastery of Dutch silverwork practices. Inscribed on the reverse side of the crown is the name of its donor, Semuel Coen Nassi, a prominent member of the Jewish community who donated this piece. He bought the land on which Suriname’s first synagogue was built and was also a commander of the community’s militia. Handsomely decorated with punched, engraved leaves, flowers, and animals, the crown’s band is additionally adorned with diamonds, circles, and other geometric forms.
Someone in a tales is walking your rooftops.
Only he is stirring in the city by night.
He listens. Old gray veins quicken—sound
Through courtyard and synagogue like a hoarse, dusty heart.
You are a…
Theda Bara (1885–1955) was born Theodosia Burr Goodman in Cincinnati. After completing public high school, Goodman moved to New York to become an actress. In advertisements for the Fox Film Company’s…
The Meeting, Schulz’s only surviving oil painting, obliquely explores a theme he returned to many times in his writing and art, namely, sadomasochism, this time in the context of an encounter between…