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Albatros, a journal of literature and graphic art, debuted in Warsaw in 1922 and published its final two issues in Berlin. The journal was edited by the Hebrew-Yiddish poet Uri Zvi Greenberg and…
Contributor:
Henryk Berlewi
Places:
Berlin, Weimar Republic (Berlin, Germany)
Date:
1923
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The Spirit was launched in 1940 as a special supplement for newspapers, designed to help them compete with the crime and superhero comic magazines, which were then wildly popular. It ran as a…
Contributor:
Will Eisner
Places:
New York, United States of America
Date:
1940
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After surviving the war, Miklós Adler returned to his hometown of Debrecen and created sixteen woodcuts, signing them Ben Binyamin (“son of Benjamin”) in honor of his father. In this woodcut…
Contributor:
Miklós Adler
Places:
Terezin, Czechoslovakia (Terezin, Czech Republic)
Date:
1945
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This ketubah (ritual marriage contract) from Rhodes formalizes the marriage of Avraham, son of Yehudah Galante, and Joya, daughter of Shlomo d’Boton. The groom may have been the prominent educator…
Contributor:
Artist Unknown
Places:
Vienna, Austro-Hungarian Empire (Vienna, Austria)
Date:
1895
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Cover image and page 4 of Moyshe Broderzon’s Temerl, illustrated by Joseph Chaikov.
Contributor:
Joseph (Iosif) Chaikov, Moyshe Broderzon
Places:
Kiev, Russian Empire (Kyiv, Ukraine)
Date:
1917
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Rachel Bernstein-Wischnitzer’s cover design for Istoria evreiskago naroda (History of the Jewish People) features a title with dramatically stylized letters and a gold and black pattern that evokes…
Contributor:
Rachel Bernstein-Wischnitzer
Places:
Moscow, Russian Empire (Moscow, Russia)
Date:
1914
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The Jewish Publication Society of America (JPS) was founded in Philadelphia in 1888. (It had a number of precursors that did not last.) Today, JPS is the oldest nonprofit, nondenominational publisher…
Contributor:
Moses Ezekiel
Places:
Berlin, Germany
Date:
1913
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Cover of sheet music for “Hatikvoh” (The Hope) and “Dort vu die tseder” (There Where the Cedars Are). “Hatikvoh,” or “Hatikvah,” is based on Naftali Hertz Imber’s poem, “Tikvatenu” (Our Hope), first…
Contributor:
Naftali Herz Imber
Places:
New York City, United States of America (New York, United States of America)
Date:
ca. 1910
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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
Places:
Date:
1955
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Anatoly Kaplan’s painting Pakhar’ both commemorates the lost Jewish world of his childhood and reflects accepted Soviet iconography. The Yiddish inscription that frames the central image reads,…
Contributor:
Anatoly Kaplan
Places:
Leningrad, USSR (St Petersburg, Russia)
Date:
1960