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Peintures
A BRIEF HISTORY OF JEWISH ART
27 November 2008 |
The seemingly effortless process by which a suitable title is
selected for an encyclopedia such as this became exponentially more
complex and difficult as I explored the available options and heard the
mounting arguments from all sides. Finding the right mix of words was
crucial. After pondering the subject for several months in an effort to
arrive at the best possible title, I finally opted for "Around Jewish
Art." Why this title? At the outset, "around" offered me keys that
would open doors leading both to "Jewish" and to "art." The word
"about" seemed in fact rather improper, whereas "around," meaning "on
every side," or "at random" was fine as a title that would envelop the
subject of this book and, in a refreshing manner, keep it more in tune
with my seven-year effort to write it and to define the broader meaning
of the term "Jewish Art" and all of its nuances. Second, "around"
enabled me to delve into all the possible meanings of Jewish Art and
also to overcome many formidable obstacles created by the variety of
art forms involved. I liked the idea of "around" because it helped me
bypass restrictions that might have led to some dead ends. For
example, many artists listed in this exhaustive book did not follow the
same path to build their careers. Nor were they all directly or
indirectly connected with Judaism—it was only their art that was. In
contrast, the word "about" seemed too restrictive when I fell upon the
dizzying fact that the Old Testament had been used as a theme with a
universal connotation, meaning that hundreds of non-Jewish artists had
used it as a source a subject that was essentially Jewish. Another
important element was the conjunction of the words "around" and
"Jewish," because it paved the way to a loose definition of the concept
of "Jewish Art." The correct definition of the latter phrase is a hotly
debated issue on which, to date, scholars and art historians cannot
agree. To present what was "around" Jewish Art seemed an interesting
way to try to treat a range of issues such as: Jewish roots, Jewish
education, Jewish feelings, the emancipation of the Jews, their
choices, the countries they came from, their connection (or lack of
one) to their religion, their ultimate destinies, the Holocaust, the
creation of Israel, and so on. In addition, "Around Jewish Art" avoided
the controversy of interpretation. While most Jewish artists have
infused Jewish feelings in their works, artists such as Mark Rothko or
Barnett Newman plunged so deeply into their roots that their abstract
works at first glance appear to have nothing to do with Judaism. To
me, "around Jewish" also means "around the Bible," the stories and
legends of the Old Testament, the endless inspiration and sources
derived from them by many non-Jewish artists and their varied interests
in Judaism. A good example is Rembrandt, who closely mingled with the
Jews in Amsterdam and depicted them and their customs. Finally,
"around art" proved to be an appropriate combination of words, since
there are many forms of art described in this book, such as painting,
drawing, photography, engraving, collage, paper cutting, video,
installation, and sculpture. Before going further with this
Foreword, I have to admit that there is not one final definition of the
term "Jewish Art." It is at best a notion that is quite unclear to many
people. Pretending that it is not would no doubt have resulted in a
much more streamlined publication but would have eliminated numerous
extremely important artists. Having a restrictive definition as a
guideline would have led to the creation of a kind of "ghetto in print
form," because numerous Jewish artists who considered themselves above
all as "universal" would either not want to be included in a volume
having such a limited concept or would simply not fit the definition
and not be included because of an editorial decision. Jewish Art can
be described broadly as a blend of many cultures mixed with old Eastern
European or Oriental religious and secular traditions that were
gradually transformed through many upheavals, such as the falls of the
Austrian, German, and Russian empires, the Holocaust, and the creation
of Israel. The best definition of the term seems to lie in the
expression of Jewish feelings exhaled by artists bound, like it or not,
by their roots and also by the persecutions and restrictions the Jewish
people have suffered over the centuries. Being a Jew was often a
burden, but somehow many felt a sort of hidden or avowed pride,
regardless of the consequences. There is, in fact, a solid
psychological, if not ancestral, link to creation among the People of
the Book. From childhood on, they became acquainted with that link and
strove to sublimate themselves through the ages in every part of the
world. Strangely enough, and thanks to the Emancipation, Jewish artists
played a significant part in the history of art after the
mid-nineteenth century as if they eagerly wanted to show or prove their
skills to the world. Proportionately, in the field of art their numbers
far exceeded their percentage of the earth's population. This book is dedicated to all artists who shared this link, especially those whose careers ended abruptly in Nazi death camps. A BRIEF HISTORY OF JEWISH ART
Overview
For
over a thousand years, traditional boundaries, both within the
community and without, limited the roles of Jews in society, hence
constricting their opportunities and their rights. Prior to the
eighteenth century, art was rarely adopted as an occupation because the
community faced so many restrictions. Even the Jewish religion
itself created an obstacle. The Second Commandment, which is one of
Judaism's most central principles, decrees that the believer ought not
to represent God by "any carved statue or picture of anything in the
heaven above, on the earth below, or in water below the lands." The
biblical text also warns the believer to "watch yourselves very
carefully, since you did not see any image on the day that God spoke to
you out of the fire of Horeb. You shall therefore not become corrupt
and make a statue depicting any symbol, any male or female image or the
image of any animal on the earth" (Deuteronomy 4:16–18). These
injunctions exercised constant influence over the historic course of
Jewish Art, restricting or inhibiting its full development. Even the
Talmudic and rabbinical authorities tended to reinforce these
injunctions and in most cases equated image-making with idolatry.
Surprisingly, though, the Scriptures do contain affirmative references
to art and to its makers: Exodus 31:3–5 and Exodus 35:31–34 contain
praise for the master craftsmen of the Temple, and in other places,
such as Sabbath 133b, a religiously sanctioned need to glorify the
divine with beautiful objects is expressed. Surprisingly, though,
the Second Commandment was interpreted across time in many different
ways, despite rabbinical censure. Some archaeological finds and
material evidence collected during the past century do not show a
completely monolithic abstention from art or image-making. In addition,
some human figures were produced in certain ritual prayer books during
Roman times as well as during the Middle Ages. The visual arts hence
continued to be produced in many different forms, which indicates that
the different Jewish congregations and Jewish artists managed to work
in various ways alongside or around the restrictions cited above. The
rich Mosaic representations found in the synagogues of Galilee of the
third to the sixth centuries and the extraordinary murals of the
third-century Doura Europos Synagogue in Syria, as well as literary
references to others, tend to suggest that during a certain period, the
visual arts did play a significant role in Jewish life. Hence,
Jewish Art was defined and developed over time as the instrument of
religious needs and aims. Because of the persecutions they suffered,
members of the Jewish communities in Europe never felt themselves in a
position to adopt painting until at least the nineteenth century. As a
result, only a few artists, notably in Britain and Germany, were active
by the end of the eighteenth century. Being a minority in most parts
of the world, Jews were usually granted some communal self-government
but were restricted in where they could live, the occupations they
could pursue, and the legal and civil rights they enjoyed. In most
countries, only a privileged few escaped these restrictions.
The
nature of Jewish Art was to change considerably with the Emancipation
and greater secularization of Jewish culture. Prior to the
Emancipation, Jewish Art had been in a long period of decline. But
Jewish life was eventually transformed by the philosophy of the
Enlightenment, when the concepts of liberty, equality, and the
improvement of humankind through education and historical progress
spread throughout Europe, stimulating a new attitude toward Jews.
Cultural and social spheres that had previously been closed to them
became accessible; even European art schools no longer discriminated.
They ceased to be merely models and became sculptors and painters
themselves. Moreover, the trend toward separating the religious and the
secular life encouraged some of them to opt for nonreligious themes. The
exponents of the Jewish Enlightenment (Haskala), who, were militating
for a transformation of Judaism around 1830 and inviting Jews to study
sciences and foreign languages, induced many individuals to adopt
European culture. As a result, they were increasingly enabled to ignore
the religious ban without the risk of facing denunciation from the
closed orthodox circles, and this led to the phenomenon of Jewish
Expressionism, which refreshed the panoply of symbols, signs, and
rituals of the Mosaic culture. As Emancipation progressed, many Jews
became prosperous; they were less concerned with religion and more
aware of the arts, since this was one of the areas of endeavor now open
to the community. As a result, Jewish artists started to be visible
during the second half of the nineteenth century. Thanks to the new
outlook of many Jews and several painters, the world of art went on to
gain a new dimension after 1870 with the emergence of such artists as
Jozef and Isaac Israëls, Edouard Moyse, Moritz Daniel Oppenheim,
Isidore Kaufmann, Maurycy Gottlieb, Simeon Solomon, Maurycy Trembacz,
Camille Pissarro, Max Liebermann, Abel Pann, Lesser Ury, Yehuda Pen,
Marc Chagall, Issachar Ber Ryback, Henryk Hayden, El Lissitzky, Amedeo
Modigliani, Jules Pascin, Chaim Soutine, Moise Kisling, Jankel Adler,
Eugène Zak, Chana Orloff, Louis Marcoussis, Marcel Janco, Jacques
Lipchitz, Otto Freundlich, Felix Nussbaum, Isaac Levitan, Nathan
Altman, Nina Kogan, Antoine Pevsner, Naum Gabo, Isaac Grunewald, Chaim
Goldberg, Emmanuel Mane-Katz, Lasar Segall, Jakob Steinhardt, Ludwig
Meidner, Moshe Castel, Reuven Rubin, Haim Glicksberg, Moshe Mokady,
Nahum Gutman, Victor Brauner, Morton Schamberg, Saul Steinberg, Max
Weber, Adolph Gottlieb, George Segal, Barnett Newman, Mark Rothko, and
many others. At the turn of the twentieth century, there were only a
score of good Jewish painters. Fifty years later, there were over a
hundred. Their golden era spanned thirty years, from 1910 to 1940,
after which the Nazi invasion of Europe and the ensuing Holocaust
caused the irreparable disappearance of many talented artists. After
the Second World War, the Jewish School took some years to reemerge,
and, since the death of Chagall, its leading figure, it has found no
major new impetus, although the contingent of Jewish artists has been
growing ceaselessly since then.
Genesis
It
would be misleading to imply that Jewish Art started only some 150
years ago. In fact, while the Second Commandment (Exodus 20:4) orders,
"You won't produce any sculpted image," it qualifies this by saying,
"You won't prostrate yourself before them, and you won't serve them"
(Exodus 20:5). Therefore, the Jews living in the Holy Land during Roman
times permitted the decoration of the Holy Ark in the Holy Temple in
Jerusalem., It was adorned with two cherubim, and the beginnings of
Jewish Art can be linked to the erection of the First Temple, which
acted as a stimulus to the development of Jewish Art. According to
legend, the first known Jewish artist was Bezalel, who designed the
sacred Ark mentioned in the Bible for Moses. Many Jewish artists who
are unknown to us followed in his footsteps during ancient times. For
many centuries, the Temple was the focal point of Jewish culture and
the source of much artistic endeavor. During the ninth century B.C.E.,
even King Solomon himself violated the Second Commandment somewhat when
he decided to put an imposing bronze basin called the "Molten Sea,"
supported by twelve sculpted oxen, in the Temple compound.
Circumscribed embellishment became a prerequisite of some Jewish
religious practices. After the destruction of the Temple, there was
a time of tolerance during which rabbis often indulged in the use of
artistic artifacts. Paintings had already been much in use in
synagogues and homes during Hellenistic times. Indeed, following the
Greek and Roman conquests, many synagogues were richly adorned with
paintings and Mosaic floorings. In this period there was a greater
concentration on the development of a decorative visual vocabulary.
Also, a distinction came to be made between images for decoration and
images for adoration. Frequent clashes over the use of figurative
images in religious and semireligious contexts became the pretext for
political confrontations, insurgencies, and revolts. They proved
that the Jewish people, like most others of that era, had a special
liking for art. Many communities built richly adorned synagogues, while
individuals would order illustrated religious manuscripts for their
personal use. There were many representations of King David and of
major biblical events, while other themes were derived from pagan
mythology, such as Orpheus playing the harp and charming animals,
representing the victory of the soul over the forces of the universe
and death. After the Second Temple was destroyed by the Romans,
Jewish Art regressed, although communities in exile had their artists
decorate synagogues or illuminate prayer books. As an example, the
extraordinary art decorating the synagogue of Doura Europos, built
during the third century, was purely Greek in style. In certain
parts of Europe, however, especially in Italy, some artists managed to
produce works at least until the Renaissance. Here, even Christianity
was a source of inspiration for Jewish painters. The fall of the
Roman Empire and the rise of Islam led to the splitting of the Jewish
community into two quite different geopolitical groupings. In the
Islamic world, Eastern Jews were forced to abide by the principles of
the Moslem religion, which banned all figurative images. Therefore,
artists limited themselves to a rigorous nonrepresentational art that
consisted of highly ornate geometric, calligraphic, and curvilinear
designs. In the Christian world, illustrated manuscripts dealing
with the Jewish religion were produced freely, especially in southern
Europe. The trend was somewhat different during the twelfth and
thirteenth centuries in Germany, where the representatives of the new
ascetic Hassidic movement were opposed to any aesthetic ambition.
Instead, human faces in manuscripts produced in the Rhine region were
shown with bird bills or were replaced with the heads of animals.
Moreover, many religious manuscripts produced in the Christian world
bore testimony to the brilliant talent of Jewish illuminators between
1100 and 1500. There was probably a much earlier illuminated manuscript
tradition, the historic traces of which have been lost, and such
tradition may have run as far back as late antiquity. Because an
estimated 20,000 Jewish manuscripts were lost in a fire around 1240,
researchers were prevented from pinpointing the ancestry of this
tradition. Apart from illuminated manuscripts, Jewish religious
artifacts in medieval times were often made with artistic
embellishment. Some notable examples included Hanukkah lamps, Torah
shields, Torah finials, etrog containers, and sanctuary lamps, spice
towers, goblets, and candlesticks. These ritual objects were made
according to a true Jewish style that had emerged throughout Europe. It
would be wrong to believe that Jews lived only in restricted areas
during the Middle Ages. In fact, many Christian measures against them
were not always applied, and certain communities enjoyed some relative
freedom at certain times. In his book, The Merchant of Perugia: A
Jewish Community during the Middle Ages, Ariel Toaff noted that many
injunctions against Italian Jews often remained without effect,
although the Jews suffered annoyances from time to time, as when they
were forced to live in restricted areas. But it was not until 1516 that
the ghetto of Venice was set up, followed by that of Rome, which was
ordered by Pope Paul IV in 1555. Hence, from the thirteenth until
the second half of the fifteenth centuries, Jews enjoyed a degree of
freedom and became prosperous among Christians in northern Italy. Many
members of the Jewish community there worked as doctors, apothecaries,
bankers, merchants selling skin dressings, clothes, spices, and
cereals, or as cobblers, mattress makers, bookbinders, coachmen, job
masters, blacksmiths, silversmiths, ragmen, secondhand dealers, and
even gunpowder makers, who were registered in Christian guilds. In
the world of the arts, Jews in Parma, Pesaro, Florence, Perugia, and
Venice ran many dancing schools. One of the most famous dancing masters
around 1470 was Deodato di Mose, a Jew who taught all kinds of steps to
Italian aristocrats. In Perugia, three Jews were registered in the
guild of painters, although they were not pupils of the famous Perugin
or well-known artists but were employed for the decoration of banners. It
seems probable that several other Jewish painters were active in
certain Italian towns between the thirteenth century and the beginning
of the sixteenth century and that certain Renaissance or
seventeenth-century artists might have descended from a number of Jews
who had become Christian converts. It has often been suggested that the
famous Italian painter, Veronese, had Jewish roots, as well as the
Greek-born El Greco, especially since the latter lived a few yards away
from the ancient synagogue of Toledo. Jews and Christians lived in
comparative harmony in northern Italy until the Catholic Church decided
to set up pawnshops to put an end to the activities of Jewish bankers.
The great anti-Jewish preaching enacted by minor religious orders after
1450 resulted in discriminatory regulations such as a requirement to
wear distinctive signs, the imposition of fines and heavy taxes, an
interdiction against travel during Holy Week, expropriations,
expulsions, and forced conversions. Similar and often harsher measures
took place throughout Europe, but one can imagine that French, Spanish,
and German Jews enjoyed the same freedom as their Italian counterparts
during certain periods of the Middle Ages. In Spain, the best-known
Jewish artist during medieval times was Juan de Levi. Levi was a famous
painter during the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the
fifteenth centuries. He probably decorated synagogues with
nonfigurative paintings, but his full talent was expressed in the works
he produced for several Catholic churches. Between 1392 and 1403, he
painted an altar for Tarazona Cathedral comprising thirty-two small and
three big paintings that can still be seen today. He also produced two
altarpieces, one for the church at Montalban and one for Hoz de la
Vieja in 1405. Levi is the best-known of those Jewish artists of the
Middle Ages who, instead of producing illuminated manuscripts, worked
on a larger scale. However, we can assume that some other Jewish
artists followed a similar path during at least three centuries before
Jews were expelled from Spain in 1492. After their expulsion, Spanish
Jews faced so many restrictions that only Christian converts (or
Marranos) ,were able to pursue artistic careers. Historians have been
unable to obtain full biographical details on only a few of these
artists working during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. It
is also known that not all the makers of Jewish illuminated manuscripts
in the medieval period were themselves Jewish. It was often customary
at that time for Christian craftsmen to be employed in the making of
Jewish religious artifacts and for Jews to be employed in the
production of Christian objects or paintings. During the
Renaissance, the Christian world saw the emergence of a whole range of
new artistic ideals and new stylistic values. Some of the changes that
occurred during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries found their way
into Jewish Art and led to its transformation. Many ritual objects
were produced in addition to the Menorah, which was already in use
during biblical times. Items such as Rimmonim or Torah finials, Torah
bells, Torah breastplates, Kiddush cups, and embroidered brocades were
introduced into Jewish ritual during the fifteenth century and became
the focus of many artistic endeavors. These objects eventually included
figurative elements such as images of Abraham, Aaron, and Moses. The
great resurgence in invention and the dissemination of printing
techniques during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries also had a
certain impact on Jewish life. This development led to the
incorporation of images in some religious books and materials,
including the Megilat Esther, the Passover Haggadah, and the Ketubbah
(marriage certificate). There was, therefore, a long period of
Jewish artistic activity that originated with the Bible and biblical
times and spanned over two thousand years, even though religion and the
uncertainties of life caused by persecutions prevented free and truly
significant development of Jewish Art. Historically, Jewish Art was
defined and developed as the instrument of religious needs and aims.
Because of the persecution they suffered, members of the Jewish
communities in Europe never felt themselves in a position to take up
painting until at least the nineteenth century. As a result, only a few
artists, in Britain and Germany particularly, were active by the end of
the eighteenth century. Moreover, wherever they went, Jews would adopt
the style of their adopted countries. Moreover, such art was so
closely associated with religion that it was not really understood by
gentiles, even those as well-educated as Voltaire, the well-known
eighteenth-century French writer and philosopher, who simply denied its
existence. Many art historians have also concluded that Jewish Art was
never able to acquire a cohesive stylistic basis because of the
fragmented historical and geographical manner in which it developed. With
respect to style, and especially with the dispersion of the Diaspora,
Jewish Art was quite dependent on surrounding styles. While it always
remained selective about what and how it would apply its borrowings
from other artistic traditions, the fact remains that no Jewish Art
existed in a conventional sense that could be compared with other
artistic traditions deriving from Greek, Roman, Gothic, French, German,
Flemish, or Italian influences. Instead, it was characterized by a
situation in which each locality or each nucleus of Jewish culture had
to operate within what were at times completely divergent historical,
cultural, legal, and material circumstances.
The Emancipation
The
course of Jewish Art was to change dramatically with the onset of the
Emancipation. Cultural and social spheres that were previously closed
to Jews became accessible and, as religious and secular life became
more separate, some Jewish artists opted for nonreligious themes. Every
school of painting has to start somewhere, and with Jewish painters the
trend was quite academic at the beginning. They produced mainly
portraits and some landscapes; only a few found their inspiration
within their community. Because of the religious ban in Deuteronomy and
also a leaning toward traditional art, few made use of signs and
symbols. In fact, those who indulged in painting at the beginning of
the nineteenth century did not really bother with strict religious
principles, which banned figurative pictures (2, XX, 4; -3 XXVI, I; -5,
V, 6); they worked within a nonreligious framework. As explained in The
History of Jewish Art (World ORT Union), with the Emancipation under
way, the visual arts, including figurative art, became an important
tool with which to embody or portray central aspects of Jewish culture
and history—as seen in the works of Chagall and Kitaj. Ashkenazi art
was emerging , and many Jewish artists started to assert their talents
throughout Europe. The first Jewish painters of the nineteenth century
went on to produce biblical subjects and Jewish domestic scenes that
had made an impression on the well-off Jewish public. However, until
1860, there was little representation of Jewish life. Those who engaged
in it were gentiles, such as Rembrandt, who created portraits of
several rabbis and Jewish people. Jozef Israëls concentrated on Dutch
scenes and painted only a few Judaic scenes, whereas Camille Pissarro,
who was half-Jewish, never produced any works inspired by his origins
and instead joined the Impressionist movement, becoming one of its
leading figures along with Monet, Sisley, and Renoir. In the second
half of the nineteenth century, Jewish ritual art suffered a certain
decline. This was a time when many Jews wanted to free themselves from
religious principles and decided to leave their communities to live and
work like other artists in Europe. Zionism also played a great
part in the development of Jewish Art and inspired the production of
works related to the Bible and to the landscapes of Palestine, thanks
to Ephraim Moses Lilien (1874–1925) and Boris Schatz (1866–1932), who
founded the Bezalel School of Art in Jerusalem in 1906. Jewish Art was
validated in 1901 when the Zionist movement sponsored an exhibition of
Jewish artists that traveled to Berlin in 1906 and then to London in
1913. In 1878 a Jewish artistic presence in Europe was revealed on a
large scale when music composer Isaac Strauss showed his collection of
Jewish ritual objects at the Universal Exhibition organized at the
Trocadero Hall in Paris. Collecting Hebrew manuscripts and religious
objects became popular, and Jewish painters gained recognition in
Germany (Moritz Oppenheim), Poland (Maurycy Gottlieb), England (Simeon
Solomon), and France (Edouard Moyse). It is also worthwhile to note
that many Jews became prosperous after 1840 thanks to the Emancipation
and started to collect art pieces on a large scale in France and
Germany. The quite wealthy James Simon (1851–1932) donated his
impressive collection of paintings, sculptures, and Renaissance medals
to the Kaiser Friedrich Museum in 1904. Other great Jewish collectors
in Germany included Marcus Kappel, Franz and Robert von Mendelssohn,
Alfred Breit, Oscar Huldschinsky, and Eduard Arnhold (1849–1925), who
offered the Massimo Villa in Rome to the Prussian State. Meanwhile, Max
Bohm and Rudolf Mosse possessed the biggest collections of
nineteenth-century German paintings, and Paul Davidsohn had the most
prestigious collection of engravings. Leopold Sonnemann donated most of
his French works of art to the Städelsches Kunstinstitut of Frankfurt,
and H.H. Meyer bequeathed his collection of sixty thousand rare
engravings to the Kunsthalle of Bremen.
The School of Paris (l'École de Paris)
A
colony of some one hundred foreign artists was central to the emergence
of a unique and colorful phenomenon in the legendary area of
Montparnasse between 1910 and 1940 -- the School of Paris (l'École de
Paris). No one really knows who invented this label for the art of the
years when Paris was the center of the world for art creation. The
French had invented Impressionism, Cubism, and Fauvism, and Paris was
the ideal meeting place for all sorts of groups. Every good artist
had only one wish in mind, and that was to go to the French capital and
inhale its unique atmosphere; Paris was home to dozens of celebrated
studios as well as an exciting social life, especially in the cafes of
Montmartre and Montparnasse. Many artists came from central Europe
after a stop in Vienna, Berlin, or Munich and they naturally brought
their own cultures with them. That is how the School of Paris emerged
in the footsteps of Impressionism, Cubism, and Fauvism. Its artists all
showed a leaning towards Expressionism, a trend never absorbed in
France in pure form since it was rather alien to a culture rooted in
harmony and restraint, despite its origins in French pictorialism. The
artists who came to Paris were, above all, eager to fulfill the promise
of a life different from the one they had experienced in their native
countries. They yearned for freedom in every respect, and it was in
Paris that they could find it. As Chagall once stressed, that was
because the sun of art shone at that time only in Paris. They came
to the French capital with their sorrows, their memories, their habits,
their Russian, Polish, Romanian, or German accents, and their dreams.
They lived with little, sharing attic rooms and shacks in Montparnasse
or Montmartre. Soon, they adopted a fatalist philosophy and regrouped,
gathering together to protect themselves from an unfriendly
environment. They lived day-to-day, carrying on endless discussions
about art, attending popular balls, and engaging in love affairs. While
some drank a lot, it was through their art that they overcame their
vicissitudes, finding comfort in working intensely on their canvasses.
As the Polish writer Mariusz Rosiak pointed out in an article published
in 1992, there were 172 foreign artists among the 950 who participated
in the 1919 Salon d'Automne. A year later, there were 181 foreigners
among the 928 registered at the Salon des Independants, and in 1924, at
the same Salon, their number rose to 322 out of 1150 participants. A
growing number of galleries took the risk of exhibiting the works of
the many foreign artists who had settled in France. They included the
Galerie Berthe Weill, Galerie Bernheim-Jeune, Galerie Bing, Galerie
Druet, Galerie des Quatre Chemins, Galerie Cheron, Galerie Denise Ren‚
Galerie Georges Petit, and the Galerie Zborowski, which opened in 1926.
Earlier, Leopold Zborowski had been active in selling the paintings of
Modigliani, his close friend. Many intellectuals also backed these
foreigners who had invented a new style of painting that made the
School of Paris distinctive. However, these painters did not form a
united grouping or belong to a movement; they were attached to the
School through their place of residence and also because they did not
belong to any other movement. In the same way, Picasso, the Dutch Kees
Van Dongen, and French painters such as Derain, Vlaminck, Utrillo, and
even Matisse were once linked to the School simply because, by 1914,
Fauvism was no longer in vogue. One could also say that the School
of Paris was the emanation of an artistic atmosphere that was reflected
in paintings that expressed deep feelings and used a poignant and
violently colorful brush. These painters were not simply Expressionists
like the Germans who instilled something Jewish into their paintings,
the great painters of this so-called school—Marc Chagall, Amedeo
Modigliani, Chaim Soutine, Moise Kisling, and Jules Pascin—were Jews. In
fact, critics faced a difficult task in linking certain artists to a
specific movement. Like the short-lived experience of Faurvism, any
attempt at classification was wrongheaded. For instance, some exhibits
in the French capital were called "Paintings from the New School of
Paris" but showed only Cubist works. Before World War I, German
newspapers used the term "School of Paris" to identify any avant-garde
trend that was different than German Expressionism. For most purposes,
however, reference to the School of Paris embraces the output of all
foreign artists whose biographies, works, and careers were inseparable
from the Paris of the period between 1910 and 1940. A thousand years
of Ashkenazi culture culminated in Paris, and numerous artists
blossomed as a result. Among the best-known were Marek Szwarc
(1892–1958), Pinchus Kremegne (1890–1981), and Joseph Tchaikov
(1888–1986), who worked in the studios of La Ruche and published the
first Jewish Art hectograph review, Makhmadim (The Precious), without,
however, attempting to create a new form of Jewish Art. Although Marc
Chagall did not share their ideals and worked in his own way, he had
great influence over many Ashkenazi artists after the First World War.
They considered him their master and source of inspiration. The
best approach to explaining the significance of the School would be to
examine the output of a historic group of painters active in
Montparnasse before 1930. Most of the artists linked to the School of
Paris were of Jewish descent, mostly from central and eastern Europe,
and their art had some connections with Expressionism, even though many
of them had assimilated new trends such as Cubism, Futurism,
Postimpressionism, and Fauvism. Picasso was the most remarkable
representative of the School, which included Matisse, Rouault, Utrillo,
Chagall, Soutine, Suzanne Valadon, Foujita, and Modigliani in its
ranks. All these artists evoked in their work a variety of
emotional states, ranging from sadness and despair to joy and ecstasy.
These mental attitudes crystallized the works of the School of Paris
artists into an expression of the universal meaning of life and
creation, often turning into hyperbolic exegeses of the human
condition: birth, motherhood, transience, transcendental longings, old
age, and death, along with reflections on the ugliness and beauty of
the world. Mariusz Rosiak once wrote, "Melancholia, tragedy, nostalgia,
poetry, and some symbols of the Jewish and Slav world were the usual
mixtures to be found in the paintings produced by these artists." These
feelings arose from the clash between their cultures and the one that
prevailed in Paris as well as the confrontation between their dreams
and the reality of the life they faced. They had fled from cruel social
conditions and perhaps even more from the cultural circles of ancestors
who were hostile to painting, and this can be sensed in their works,
which express longing for the continuity of tradition, history, and
culture and at the same time for the development of their art. The
artists were unable to forget their roots. Their childhoods,
upbringing, religion, and habits clung to them despite the fact that
they had jumped into a modern world. They had escaped dictatorship and
oppression but still seemed to feel some dizziness while breathing in
their new freedom. They still had fear within their hearts and some
anguish about the future, perhaps anxious that they, as foreigners,
would remain isolated from the French natives—who, it must be stressed,
generally considered them aliens. Art historians have credited the
absence of images within the Jewish religion for centuries as a major,
if not the single most important, force that contributed to the
phenomenon of Jewish Expressionism, which refreshed the world of
symbols, signs, and rituals of Jewish culture. As a result, many
achievements of the School of Paris had an almost archetypal dimension.
Its artists painted by exhaling their experiences and instincts and by
displaying rich effects of texture and color. During a period called
the "Mad Years" (Les Années Folles) they expressed their emotions,
obsessions, passions, and sufferings when, after witnessing the
atrocities of the war, they felt the urge to grasp beauty and
sensuality, not only in representing the female image but also in still
lifes and landscapes. The School was a mixture of nationalities,
talents, moods and trends. Nevertheless, for a long time the French
were reluctant to acknowledge that most of the great painters of the
School of Paris were foreigners who were in some way open to prevailing
French traditions while giving something in return to their adopted
country. There could have been no Soutine—nor many other famous foreign
painters, such as Van Gogh, for instance—without France, a country that
gave Soutine the language of expression, and yet this artist was quite
distant from earlier French painters such as Corot, Vuillard, and
Bonnard. Soutine and many like him had an admiration for the culture of
harmony and moderation, but they later turned against it because of
their nostalgia, their difficulties in adapting to normal life, and
their frustrations. Paris had a fantastic impact on their
workmanship, and its atmosphere enabled them to reach potentialities
they would probably never had achieved had they stayed in their native
countries. Yet their brilliant careers suffered a setback in the 1930s,
when xenophobia swept Europe. The former openness and tolerance were
replaced by antagonism during those difficult years. Suddenly these
foreign artists were ostracized, and those who had supported them
changed sides and accused them of undermining French tradition in art.
The Parisian press ceased to publish articles about the Montparnasse
painters, and the School of Paris became a vague notion for people who
had previously flocked to its exhibitions. Describing the School of
Paris as "a house of cards built in Montparnasse," Waldemar George, who
used to shower fulsome praise on the artists of this School during the
1920s, was quoted some years later as saying, "The time has come for
France to be on her feet again and find the seed of salvation in its
own soil." Foreign painters had settled in Paris from Japan
(Foujita, Koyanagui, and a few others), the Netherlands (Van Dongen),
Spain (Picasso, Juan Gris), Italy (Modigliani), Hungary (Czobel,
Kolos-Vary, Bondy), Bulgaria (Pascin), Lithuania (Soutine, Lipchitz,
Band), Czechoslovakia (Coubine, Kars), Romania (Codreanu, Brancusi,
Brauner), Norway (Krogh), Russia (Chagall, Orloff), and Poland, whose
artists outnumbered by far those of other countries (Kisling, Zak,
Marcoussis, Hayden, Aberdam, Epstein, Feuerring, Halicka, Kanelba,
Kirszenbaum, Mondzain, Menkes, Weingart, Kramsztyk, Landau, and
others). At the outbreak of the Second World War, these painters were
rejected and persecuted. Several of them fled France, but many others
did not survive the war.
A School for the Jews of Eastern Europe
In
the nineteenth century, Russian Jews, in particular, started to show a
deep interest in their own culture, as evidenced by such art critics
and patrons as Vladimir Stasov and Baron Daniel de Guenzburg. One must
point out the importance of the School of Vitebsk in Byelorussia, where
Yehuda Pen (1854–1937), Chagall's master, opened the first Jewish
school of art in 1892. It was here that Chagall discovered the
importance of daily Jewish life, of the shtetl, of craftsmen and
rabbis. He was the first artist to create a poetic world inspired by
Judaic themes as well as his discovery of Cubism and Supremacist
painting. Expressing his personal poetic fantasy and the collective
feelings of Eastern European Jews, Chagall produced works that ravished
Jews and captured the attention of non-Jews as well. Along with
Chagall, many other Russian-Jewish painters expressed their talents,
including Shlomo Yudovin, El Lissitzky, Nathan Altman, Robert Falk, and
Issachar Ryback, who took part in the first Jewish Art exhibition in
Russia in 1916. New artistic experiments with book illustrations
and engravings were so striking that these techniques influenced new
layout methods applied by the Bauhaus movement in Germany. El
Lissitzky, in particular, became very famous through his illustrations
of Yiddish books such as Sikhes Khulin (Gossips, 1917), Had Gadye
(1919) and Yingl Tsingt Khvat (1922). Meanwhile, in 1922 Chagall
illustrated the Troyer (Mourning), a compilation of poems produced by
David Hofstein and incorporating his visions of pogroms. Issachar
Ryback combined Cubism and Expressionism in his illustrations for The
Shtetl (1923) and Jewish Types of Ukraine (1924), while Joseph Tchaikov
mixed Art Nouveau with Futurism, Supremacism, and Cubism in his
illustration of Di Kupe (1922), a funeral song by the poet Peretz
Markish. Chagall, Altman, and David Shterenberg joined the Soviet
movement during the Revolution of 1917. The former was appointed
commissioner for the arts in Vitebsk, while, in Kiev, artists such as
Ryback, Tchaikov, and Aronson regrouped within the Kultur-Lige
(Cultural League), a socialist institution that founded schools and
institutes. Through this group, which organized exhibitions, an
attempt was made to create a modern Jewish Art via research into
authentic Jewish form, color, and national and organic rhythm. An
exhibition organized in Kiev in 1920 served as a springboard for a
group of artists including Boris Aronson, Isaak Rabinovich, Alexander
Tyshler, and Nisson Shifrin who were working for Jewish and Russian
theaters in Moscow. The Kultur-Lige had an ephemeral existence and
fell under the control of the Bolshevik Yevsektsiya (the Jewish section
of the Communist Party) in December 1920. As head of the Vitebsk
Academy of Fine Arts, Chagall played a leading role during the Soviet
Revolution. But, after Malevich's Supremacist ideas won support from
revolutionary leaders, he lost his post and went to Moscow, where he
worked actively for Jewish theater. In neighboring Poland, Jewish
Art had the greatest momentum, thanks to many artists who worked both
inside and outside this country after its independence in 1918. The
first Jewish Art exhibition took place in Lodz in 1921 with works by
Henryk Barcinski (1896–1941) and Yitzhok Brauner (1887–1944). The core
of the Jewish avant-garde movement, with Henryk Berlewi as its leader,
moved to Warsaw. Along with Henryk Gottlieb and Wladislaw Weintraub,
Berlewi took part in setting up the Society of Jewish Artists, which
became the Association of Jewish Artists from Poland in 1931. Jewish
painters from Poland painted in all kinds of styles, including free
abstraction, Cubism, Postimpressionism, Expressionism, and Social
Realism, which was launched in the Soviet Union in the 1930s. Some of
these painters rapidly gave up Judaic themes and participated in the
development of a modern art that was devoid of any Jewish specificity. Finally,
Ashkenazi art allowed Jewish life and popular traditions from Eastern
Europe to be depicted through the bubbling creative activities of
painters who explored many artistic domains and left their marks on
modern art. It suffered a terrible hiatus in Europe as a result of the
Second World War, which resulted in the death of millions of Jews. The
Holocaust was an immense tragedy, and all the more so because as
thousands of artists of all kinds perished in the Nazi death camps.
The Emergence of an Israeli School
There
is no other country in the world able to offer as many artistic
varieties as those that flourish in Jerusalem, Haifa, Safed, Jaffa, and
Beersheba. In all these cities,' one can feel the intense confrontation
between tradition and modernity and the depth of Israeli art, which
combines so many styles and embraces so many cultures. This artistic
melting pot contributed to the blossoming of the Israeli School of
painting and sculpture, which can serve as solid proof of the existence
of Jewish Art for those who defend such an idea. Those who enabled
the development of Israeli art were immigrants who first preserved the
traditions of their native shtetls before amalgamating them with those
of their adoptive country. Around 1920, Israeli artists tried to impose
a form of art separate from the influences of the Diaspora. During
the first third of the twentieth century, Ashkenazi art played a major
role in Israel through the founding of many art schools in Jerusalem
and in Tel Aviv. Eventually, it absorbed the various cultures of its
cosmopolitan population as well as the beauty of Israel's landscapes
and the sunlight of the Mediterranean region. In addition, it became
diluted by Oriental, Sephardim, and Western influences. The
development of Israeli art reached an entirely new level once it tapped
into the legendary history of the Holy Land and the Bible's
inexhaustible treasury. Biblical themes recur in Israeli art despite
the fact that it has just been born, and creation seems to be a major
preoccupation for many artists exploring different innovative
directions. Israeli art is not monolithic and bears above all the mark
of plurality that incorporates the traditional and avant-garde currents
that emerged at the start of the twentieth century, when the Zionist
movement encouraged talented artists to study and settle in Jerusalem. Beginning
in 1930, Israeli art went on to absorb Expressionist and Cubist
influences due to the arrival in Palestine of massive numbers of
immigrants fleeing Nazi persecution. This resulted in the creation of a
characteristic Israeli school of abstract painting. During the 1940s,
many artists mixed tradition and abstraction to formulate some kind of
local art without closing the door to foreign influences. Today,
Israeli artists face complex identity problems. While they see
themselves as members of international artistic movements, they also
face critical issues of security and its consequences as citizens of a
country born in the aftermath of the Holocaust and always at war. In
the past few years, some artists have turned to traditional themes such
as the legendary Golem and ritual scenes of past Jewish life, and to
autobiographical explorations in their search for Jewish identity. This
phenomenon may be linked to the recent American emphasis on
multiculturalism. Others express the problems of the Holocaust, a theme
shared with Jewish artists elsewhere; while still others create works
on the social tensions of contemporary Israeli society. One can
expect that Israeli art will enter a new phase in its development once
the State of Israel finds a way to be totally at peace with its Arab
neighbors during the early twenty-first century.
Tradition versus Modernity
In
the passage from traditional worlds to modernity, Jews evolved from a
culture where identity depended on the community to one in which
identity is formed by the individual. For a time, Jewish artists
sought subject matter within their communities, but, over the years,
this focus was replaced by a greater involvement in more general
artistic issues, these two contrastive attitudes being exemplified in
the work of Chagall, on the one hand, and on the other, of Pissarro. By
the end of the nineteenth century many Jews tended to overlook the
confining parameters of their own religious artistic traditions and
sought instead to relate to more universal or more contemporary
artistic issues. Although this resulted in less attention being given
to the making of Jewish Art, it still meant that artists of Jewish
origin could play their parts in the development and creation of modern
art, and those contributions have been significant. With respect to
tradition, no significant evidence of a true Jewish school of painting
appeared before 1870. At around that time, the Hungarian Isidore
Kaufman began a career that made him the most important Jewish genre
painter. Traveling throughout eastern Europe, Kaufman was constantly in
search of material in Jewish towns and villages, sketching as he went. Maurycy
Gottlieb, born in Poland in 1856, was perhaps the most talented Jewish
artist, certainly as talented as Kaufman, but unfortunately, he died
prematurely at the age of twenty-three. By far the most expensive
Jewish artwork is that of the painter Marc Chagall. Chagall made the
wise decision to establish his new quarters in France in 1922. While in
Paris, Chagall remained true to his origins and continued to produce
his eastern-European Jewish iconography and biblical scenes throughout
the rest of his life. In his mind, Jewish Art was somewhat sacred, and
his own art revolved almost entirely around the Bible and Judaic
traditions; he recalled that the atmosphere of Vitebsk, his hometown,
was strangely similar to that of Jerusalem and often used to say that
art deriving from the Bible was in fact naturally universal. Next
to Chagall, the work of Modigliani, who never painted Jewish subject
matter, is the most valuable, and next comes work by Pissarro, who was
half Jewish. Max Liebermann (1847–1935) became the greatest
Impressionist painter. Despite a long stay in Paris, where he worked
under the influence of Jean-Francois Millet, he settled in Berlin.
Showing a major interest in rural scenes, he glorified the German
working class and seldom painted Jewish subject matter, as he felt much
integrated into the German society. Unfortunately, he faced a rather
harsh return to reality in his old age when waves of anti-Semitic
activity swept his country after the Nazi takeover in 1933. The
painter Alfred Wolmark (1877–1961), on the other hand, was deeply
concerned about his roots. Born in Warsaw, he arrived in London's East
End as a child and remained close to his community; he explored the
Jewish subjects familiar to him in a style reminiscent of Rembrandt.
His success with such works in London during the first decade of the
twentieth century was quite considerable. Later in his career, he
produced works in increasingly vibrant colors. Born in Nancy,
eastern France, Edouard Moyse (1827–?) was the first Jewish genre
painter of France. He began showing Jewish portraits and scenes at the
1850 Salon. In the United States, William Auerbach-Levy
(1889–1965) was among the first painters of Jewish portraits, beginning
around 1910. Chaim Goldberg, who was born in Poland (1917– ) is
the personification of the uprooted Jewish experience of many Ashkenazi
artists who experienced displacement during the Second World War. While
others merely brought their eastern-European shtetl characters to the
United States, Goldberg bridges the "divide" between the purely Jewish
subjects and non-Jewish subject matter. Having experienced culture
shock upon his arrival from Israel, he was moved to "break pattern"
with the more familiar eastern-European and Holocaust themes, making it
easier for these feelings to be expressed through his art. His later
themes varied as well, as can be seen in his work on the subject of
dance as a metaphor for greater dignity and brotherhood toward one
another. Another painter, Jean Balthazar Klossowski de Rola, known
as "Balthus," should be worth mentioning even though this major artist
always denied that he was Jewish. In a biography of Balthus published
in August 1999, American author Nicholas Fox Weber firmly stated that
Balthus was so ashamed of being Jewish-born that he went as far as
pretending he had Polish noble roots. However, the Polish magazine
Gazeta Antykwarycna maintains that Balthus's grandfather on his
mother's side was a cantor in a Warsaw synagogue during the second half
of the nineteenth century. Free to choose which elements would
define their Jewish status or beliefs, some Jewish artists have chosen
nationalism centered on the State of Israel; others have transferred
the Jewish sense of responsibility for the community to broader social
movements. A portion of the Jewish community has remained committed to
religious observance, while others have transformed the Jewish
imperative to study religious texts into a commitment to scholarship in
general. These are only a few of the contemporary responses to the
issue of Jewish identity.
Can it be said that there is a
specific Jewish style? Can we refer to Jewish Art if a non-Jewish
artist produces a Judaic-related work? Can we talk about Jewish Art if
certain Jewish painters, such as Modigliani and Soutine, never painted
Judaic paintings? Such questions will always lead to heated debate, and
ultimately no one has the right answer. Any contemporary
definition of the content of Jewish Art would need to incorporate two
quite contrasting groups of products and makers: that of religiously
inspired makers and artists, and that of secular makers and artists—two
groups that often took divergent views on aims and ideals. It must be
stressed, however, that many artists show a distinct sense of
identification with Jewish history and Jewish culture by referring to
religious themes in their works. Some will say that the many
examples of Jewish artists, collectors, art critics, and museums do
not prove the reality of a form of art that is essentially Jewish. Even
such personalities as the philosopher Martin Buber and the art critic
Harold Rosenberg, have challenged the essence of Jewish Art. Others
will argue that such art is demonstrated by catalogues of Christie's
and Sotheby's specific "Judaica" sales, in which painting plays a major
role. In addition, no one can deny that Jews from Eastern Europe played
an important role in the fields of painting and sculpture at a
universal level but also at the level of Judaic traditions. Paradoxically,
the Nazis supported the idea of the existence of Jewish Art when they
denounced its "degenerate" influence over German society in the early
1930s. They went so far as to carry out an extraordinary artistic
pogrom during which they destroyed many works produced by Jewish
artists and organized exhibitions critical of such art; many non-Jewish
artists attached to the Cubist and Expressionist movements were also
persecuted because their works were considered subversive by the
authorities of the Third Reich, who aspired to establish a new order
that would last a thousand years. Nevertheless, it will remain
highly controversial to speak of some kind of national art—and this is
true for Jews and non-Jews. For example, Ashkenazi art, like many other
foreign schools, developed mainly in Paris. While there has been no
controversy about Jewish ritual art and crafts, the controversial
debate on the existence of a true Jewish Art will continue.
Sincere thanks to: Francis Briest-Artcurial (Paris) Lucien Calma (Paris) Josephine Geraldine Darmon (Paris) Nolan Frederick Darmon (Paris) Josef Elgurt Nicolas Feuillie (Paris) Wojtek Fibak (Poznan) Helene Hoog (Paris) Bogdan Jakubowski (Paris) Galerie Panorama, Anatol Tyliszczak Hungarian Jewry Museum (Israel) Jewish Museum Amsterdam Jewish Museum in Greece Jewish Museum New York K'Dor (Paris) Aron Kupfer (Paris) Yosef Lustig (Israel) Claude-Gerard Marcus Groupe Massol (Paris) Souren Melikian (Paris) Galerie Muse (Saint-Ouen) Musee d'Art et d'Histoire du Judaisme de Paris Musee du Petit Palais, Geneva Eric Pillon (Calais) Prague Jewish Museum Galerie Saphir (Paris) Bernard Sberro (Paris) Felix Schuster (Luxembourg) Elie Szapiro (Paris) Wanda Szubielski (Canada) Jacques Tajan (Paris) Vilna Gaon Jewish Museum Christophe Zagrodzki (Paris) | Researcher: Salwomir Urbanksi, Paris (For Polish and Russian artists) With the kind help of: Krystyna Letouzet, (Paris) Shalom Goldberg (United States) Cinthia Farkas, Budapest Marcia Josephy (United States) Arno Parik (Prague)
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