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By the 1920s, the Montparnasse artist Chana Orloff was a popular portrait sculptor, inspired by cubism and classical and “primitive” art. Her flowing, smooth-surfaced sculptures in wood or bronze…
Contributor:
Chana Orloff
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1924
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New York exemplifies the precisionist, futurist style favored by Lozowick in the 1920s. Like works by other precisionist artists, this lithograph reduces the elements of a cityscape into simple…
Contributor:
Louis Lozowick
Places:
New York City, United States of America
Date:
1925–1926
Categories:
Public Access
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This modern synagogue in Plauen (in the Saxony region) was one of the few synagogues built in Germany in the economically turbulent years of the Weimar Republic. Jews and non-Jews contributed funds…
Contributor:
Fritz Landauer
Places:
Plauen, Weimar Republic (Plauen, Germany)
Date:
1928–1930
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Chair with Red Matter was painted at a time when Henryk Berlewi was producing figurative art: portraits and still lives inspired by the work of seventeenth-century French artists. By 1957, he had…
Contributor:
Henryk Berlewi
Places:
Nice, France
Date:
1950
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Though he later turned to a more abstract style, Elbert Weinberg was still making figurative sculptures in the early 1950s, when a trend toward pure abstraction was already dominant. But Ritual Figure…
Contributor:
Elbert Weinberg
Places:
Date:
1953
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The title of this painting, La Kahena, alludes to a seventh-century military Berber queen who opposed the Arab conquest of North Africa. Legend has it that she was Jewish and also a sorceress. The…
Contributor:
Jean-Michel Atlan
Places:
Paris, France
Date:
1958
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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…
Contributor:
Sidney Eisenshtat
Places:
Brandeis, United States of America
Date:
1973
Categories:
Public Access
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Founded in 1897 in New York City, the democratic socialist Yiddish daily Forverts quickly became the most popular Jewish newspaper in the United States (and the most widely circulated non-English…
Contributor:
George Boehm
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
1912
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An illustration by El Lissitzky from Chaim Nahman Bialik’s Shloyme ha-melekh (King Solomon), from an issue of the Hebrew journal Shtilim (Saplings) that was printed in 1917 in Moscow, two days before…
Contributor:
El Lissitzky
Date:
1917
Categories:
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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