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Mendes da Costa was best known for the reliefs he sculpted for buildings in Amsterdam (many of which were figures of animals) in the style of the Niewe Kunst, the Dutch variant of Art Nouveau. But he…
Contributor:
Joseph Mendes da Costa
Places:
Amsterdam, Netherlands
Date:
1928–1938
Subjects:
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Between 1909 and 1915, Amedeo Modigliani created about twenty-five stone sculptures, using techniques he learned from the modernist sculptor Constantin Brancusi. The sculptures were inspired by…
Contributor:
Amedeo Modigliani
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1911–1912
Categories:
Public Access
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Jacques Lipchitz created The Prayer in 1943 to express his horror over the mass murder of Jews, which was then underway in Europe, reportedly crying as he made the statue. The central figure in The…
Contributor:
Jacques Lipchitz
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1943
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Whiteread’s memorial for Austrian Jewish victims of the Holocaust is located in Vienna in a square known as the Judenplatz. Sometimes called the Nameless Library, the steel and concrete structure has…
Contributor:
Rachel Whiteread
Places:
Vienna, Austria
Date:
2000
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Public Access
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Commandment II is from a series of forged-iron sculptures Kirili began in the late 1970s. They are among his best-known works and reflect his strong interest in religious concepts and ancient texts…
Contributor:
Alain Kirili
Places:
Tribeca, United States of America
Date:
1980
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Vadim Sidur was sometimes called “the Soviet Henry Moore” because of the similarities between his aesthetic and those of the British artist. In Sidur’s native Soviet Union, however, his work was…
Contributor:
Vadim Sidur
Places:
Pushkin, USSR (Pushkin, Russia)
Date:
1972
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Public Access
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In Jewish tradition, the end of the Sabbath (or a festival) is marked by the ceremony of Havdalah, which includes the ritual smelling of spices (besomim). Many Jewish cultures approached the box…
Contributor:
Emanuel Eisler
Date:
ca. 1880
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Head of a Young Jew, Natan Altman’s most famous sculpture, is an expression of his desire to set a new, modern course for Jewish art. The asymmetrical sculpture, a combination of bronze, copper, and…
Contributor:
Natan Altman
Places:
St. Petersburg, Russian Empire (St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1916
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Public Access
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Hybrid creatures with six wings, Syria, 10th or 9th century BCE. Numerous hybrid creatures, often winged, that combined features of various animals, are known from ancient art. Another example is the…
Places:
Gozan, Aram-Damascus (Tall Ḩalaf, Syria)
Date:
Iron Age II, 10th–9th Century BCE
Subjects:
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Public Access
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Terra-cotta pillar figurines are found throughout the biblical territory of Judah and date to the eighth to seventh centuries BCE. Most were decorated with a white background layer and one or more…
Places:
Lachish, Land of Israel (Tel Lakhish, Israel)
Date:
Iron Age IIB–IIC, 8th–7th Century BCE