Jewish Art 3600-HE-SZ-OW
The program of lectures has been designed to provide the audience with the broadest possible background on Jewish art, its character, distinctiveness, and significance for the Jewish community from ancient times until today. The course will cover all of the “history of Israel,” both in the land of Israel and in the European diaspora.
Over the centuries the internal dynamics and development of Jewish art were influenced by the principles of Judaism, although forms were often influenced by the art that developed in the lands where Jews lived. To understand the distinctness of Jewish art it is important to get to know the art of ancient Israel, including the Temple in Jerusalem – as the most important source and model for Jewish iconography, religious symbolism and the spatial layout of synagogues.
In the middle ages Jewish art acquired new features in Europe, and split into the art of Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews. Of importance for the medieval period are the synagogues preserved in Spain (Cordoba), Germany (Worms, Speyer, Mainz), Prague and Krakow. A special unit will be devoted to Jewish art in Eastern Europe (15th-18th centuries), with emphasis on Polish lands.
We will talk about illuminated manuscripts and the Jewish book, both as regards the relationship between text and illustration (the Book of Esther and the Haggadah), as well as the role of book illustration and design from the 16th century until modern times.
The 18th century ushered in new ideas which impacted the development of modern secular culture and Jewish art, and altered synagogue architecture. New Jewish national movements (integration, Zionism, Yiddishism) were all reflected in art. Artists took part in the creation of a new Jewish iconosphere – a symbolic image of the nation, its history, culture, and place in European and world culture. The 19th century saw the emergence of Jewish painters and sculptors, including Josef Israels, Max Liebiermann, Mark Antokolski, and Maurycy Gottlieb. The national style and iconography drew on motifs from Jewish symbolism (including religious symbols) and folk culture. For the Jewish artists beginning their careers at the end of the 19th century, entering the arena of culture and art meant having to take a stance on anti-Semitism, the failure of assimilation, and Jewish nationalism. An important experience, particularly for the artists from East-Central Europe, was the wave of pogroms that swept through the Russian empire in 1903-1906. The paintings of Hirszenberg, Wachtel, Maimon and Lilien spoke in a loud voice in the ideological discussion about the future of the Jews and of their national life in Eastern Europe.
Large cities – Warsaw Berlin, Moscow, St. Petersburg, Paris, New York, and London – saw the emergence of a Jewish public sphere, popular culture, press, theater, and exhibitions of modern Jewish art (like the one organized in Warsaw in 1911). In Paris, a circle of artists formed around the magazine Machmadim, (including Chagall, Szwarc, Tchaikov); similar circles sprung up in Warsaw (I. L. Peretz and Ber Kratka), Moscow and St. Petersburg (An-ski, Yudovin, El-Lissitzky).
The turn of the century saw the birth of modern Israeli art in Palestine, closely influenced by European-Jewish art. The founding of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem in 1906 was key factor in this development.
The Russian revolution and the wave of pogroms during World War I shook the world of Eastern European Jewry, as expressively portrayed in the art of Ryback, Maniewicz and others. After the October Revolution in Russia Jewish art went through a brief period of dynamic development (Lissitzky, Tchaikov, the Kultur-lige). But already at the beginning of the 20th century the Jewish avant-garde moved to Berlin, Warsaw (Khaliastre) and Paris (Chagall).
Jewish artists whose work did not display an overt national affiliation were also an integral part of Jewish heritage, like the Dadaists or those who became part of the École de Paris.
During the interwar period, New York and Berlin became important centers of Jewish art. Important art groups also sprung up in Warsaw, Lwow, Vilna and Krakow, from Yung-Yiddish to Yung-Vilne, exhibitions were organized and art associations founded (like the Jewish Society for the Promotion of Fine Arts). New museums opened in Vilna and Lwow, aside from the already existing Mathias Bersohn Museum in Warsaw.
During this time a new iconography (Ze’ev Raban) and new cities (Tel Aviv) took shape in Palestine.
World War II brought the destruction of European Jewry along with their cultural heritage. Jewish artists found themselves in ghettos (we will discuss examples from the Warsaw, Vilna and Lodz ghettos), internment camps in France, concentration camps, and in all these places they sought to continue their artistic work.
After the war, Jewish art developed in the shadow of the Holocaust. The Holocaust and memory became important themes in the work of artists in Poland, France, the United States and Israel.
Modern Israeli art is avant-garde, often critical of the Israeli state, exploring roots in the diaspora.
Type of course
Learning outcomes
KNOWLEDGE
- has detailed and organized knowledge of Hebrew art and aesthetics [K_W08].
- can name and characterize basic cultural phenomena of Judaism and Israel [K_W10].
- knows and understands basic analysis and interpretation methods of various products of culture characteristic of chosen theories and schools of research within the scope of cultural and literary studies, linguistics, philosophy and religion studies and history [K_W18].
- knows and understands basic analysis and interpretation methods of various products of culture characteristic of local traditions in Israel and among Jews in the diaspora [K_W19].
SKILLS
- can search for, analyze, evaluate and use information from different sources [K_U01].
- can analyze most important phenomena/trends in art (painting, sculpture, architecture, other fields) in Israel [K_U08].
- can analyze most important phenomena/trends in art (painting, sculpture, architecture, other fields) in Israel [K_U10].
- can properly function in the linguistic and cultural environment in Israel [K_U17].
- can properly function in the linguistic and cultural environment in Israel [K_U21].
SOCIAL COMPETENCES
- understands the need to learn all one’s life [K_K01].
- has awareness of the cultural distinctness and its religious, philosophical, traditional and historical roots and its significance for understanding modern world [K_K05].
- acts in aid of sharing and promoting cultural and linguistic heritage of Judaism and Israel [K_K08].
Assessment criteria
writen test - 70%
attendance control - 30%
Bibliography
Katalog Muzeum im. Mathiasa Bersohna, [Warszawa 1939].
M Goldstein, K. Dresdner, Kultura i sztuka ludu żydowskiego na ziemiach polskich, Lwów 1935 (reprint: Warszawa 1991)
Art and Its Uses. The Visual Image and Modern Jewish Society, ed. Ezra Mendelsohn, Richard I. Cohen, Oxford University Pres, London-Oxford 1990
Benjamin Harshav, The Polyphony of Jewish Culture, Stanford University Press, Stanford 2007
Tradition and Revolution. The Jewish Renaissance in Russian Avant-Garde Art 1912-1928, ed. Ruth Apter-Gabriel, exhibition cat., Jerusalem: The Israel Museum, 1987
Richard I. Cohen, Jewish Icons. Art and Society in Modern Europe, Berkeley 1998
Maria i Kazimierz Piechotkowie, Bramy nieba: bożnice drewniane na ziemiach dawnej Rzeczypospolitej, Warszawa 2016 (także wersja angielska)
Maria i Kazimierz Piechotkowie, Bramy nieba: bożnice murowane na ziemiach dawnej Rzeczypospolitej, Warszawa 1999
Maria i Kazimierz Piechotkowie, Oppidum Judeorum
Maria i Kazimierz Piechotkowie, Krajobraz z menorą: Żydzi w miastach i miasteczkach dawnej Rzeczpospolitej, Wrocław 2008
Żydzi w Polsce. Obraz i słowo, pod red. M. Rostworowskiego, Warszawa 1993
Jerzy Malinowski, Malarstwo i rzeźba Żydów Polskich w XIX i XX wieku, Warszawa 2000
Artur Tanikowscy, Malarze żydowscy w Polsce, cz. 1 i 2, Edipresse, Warszawa 2006
Tamara Sztyma-Knasiecka, Syn swojego Ludu. Twórczość Henryka Glicensteina 1870-1942 (t. III Archiwum Sztuki Polskiej), Warszawa 2008
Natasza Styrna, Zrzeszenie Żydowskich Artystów Malarzy i Rzeźbiarzy w Krakowie (1931-1939), Warszawa 2009
Jewish Artists and Central-Eastern Europe, red. Jerzy Malinowski, Renata Piątkowska, Tamara Sztyma-Knasiecka, Warszawa 2010
Artur Kamczycki, Syjonizm i sztuka. Ikonografia Teodora Herzla, Wydawnictwo Poznańskiego Towarzystwa Przyjaciół Nauk, Poznań – Gniezno 2014
Magdalena Maciudzińska-Kamczycka, Żydzi i judaizm w zwierciadle sztuki antycznej, Warszawa – Toruń 2014
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: