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Poster for Wilhelm Wachtel’s exhibition in Lwów (Lviv), 1912.
Contributor:
Wilhelm Wachtel
Places:
Lwow, Austro-Hungarian Empire (Lviv, Ukraine)
Date:
1912
Subjects:
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When Drohobycz (present-day Ukraine) was occupied by the Nazis, Bruno Schulz was initially spared the fate of other Jews in his hometown. Because of his fame as a writer and artist, he was kept alive…
Contributor:
Bruno Schulz
Places:
Drohobych, USSR (Drohobych, Ukraine)
Date:
1941–1942
Subjects:
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The Day after the Pogrom was painted shortly after the Kishinev pogrom, in which forty-nine Jews were murdered, more than 500 injured, many Jewish women raped, 700 houses ransacked and destroyed, 600…
Contributor:
Abel Pann
Places:
Odessa, Russian Empire (Odesa, Ukraine)
Date:
1903
Subjects:
Categories:
Public Access
Image
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…
Contributor:
Bruno Schulz
Places:
Drohobych, Second Polish Republic (Drohobych, Ukraine)
Date:
1920