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The Strabismic Jew is one of Baskin's most famous prints. “Strabismic” means “squinting” and, indeed, the Yiddish inscription reads “The Jew with the squinty eyes.” In this enigmatic woodcut, the face…
Contributor:
Leonard Baskin
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Date:
1955
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In 1981, Anastasi (who is not Jewish) began working on a series of works featuring the word “Jew,” because of its “charged” positive and negative valences. Untitled (jew) is composed of four canvases…
Contributor:
William Anastasi
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1987
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Cover of Else Lasker-Schüler, Hebraische Balladen. Most of the poems in this volume have biblical themes. The drawing on the cover is by Lasker-Schüler, who often illustrated her published poetry. It…
Contributor:
Else Lasker-Schüler
Date:
1913
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Cover of L’Ornement Hebreu (The Hebrew Ornament). This major work on Jewish art reproduced ornaments from medieval Hebrew illuminated manuscripts in the imperial library in St. Petersburg, Russia.
Contributor:
David Gintsburg, Vladimir Stasov
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
1905
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The three art nouveau-influenced covers by Ber Kratko for three of Y. L. Peretz’s plays feature somewhat grotesque figures. The one for Vos in fidele shtekt (What Sticks in the Fiddle) features a…
Contributor:
Ber Kratko
Places:
Warsaw, Russian Empire (Warsaw, Poland)
Date:
1910
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Cover of the first issue of La vida nuestra (Our Life), a monthly Jewish culture journal published in Buenos Aires, Argentina, between 1917 and 1923. The typography used for the periodical’s title…
Contributor:
Aron Bilis
Places:
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Date:
1917
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This illustration is from Franciscan monk Eugène Roger’s La terre saincte (The Holy Land), a comprehensive study of the Land of Israel which includes dozens of etchings depicting Jewish, Muslim, Druze…
Contributor:
Eugène Roger
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1646
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Der pinkes (The Book of Records, or The Annals) appropriated the term for the old-fashioned record book of a Jewish community or institution to name a very new phenomenon: the first “annual for the…
Contributor:
Shmuel Niger
Places:
Vilna, Russian Empire (Vilnius, Lithuania)
Date:
1913
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El Tiempo (Time) was the first Ladino-language newspaper published in Constantinople (present-day Istanbul, Turkey) and the longest-running Ladino newspaper in the city, with a run of almost sixty…
Contributor:
David Fresco
Places:
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (Istanbul, Turkey)
Date:
1892
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The heading of this advertisement for an “excursion” offered by the Yiddish daily newspaper Forverts reads: “From where are you a landsman?” (i.e., What town did you come from in the old county?). It…
Contributor:
The Forward
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1898