Description

Book Synopsis

Bringing to light little-known artistic traditions, the latest volume of Ars Judaica focuses on the local and temporal contexts of objects and their images and explores collective and personal memories and identities in art.

Rivka Ben-Sasson examines modes of symbolic perception of nature prevalent in religious thought and art by analysing images of the lulav and etrog. Iwona Brzewska and Waldemar Deluga discuss the significance of Hebrew script in paintings and prints of the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries originating from the borderland between the Catholic and Christian Orthodox domains of eastern Europe. Michelle Klein studies the typological development of the havdalah candle-holder, based on an analysis of 170 examples. Matthew Baigell suggests that American Jewish artists are characterized by concern for the betterment of humankind; his sources include Jewish postcards, photographs, and caricatures as well as the work of contemporary American Jewish artists. Astrid Schmetterling discusses how Else Lasker-Schüler’s Orientalism offered a serious aesthetic-political challenge to both German and Jewish society. Mor Presiado argues that the contemporary use of sewing and embroidery by contemporary Jewish women artists to depict women’s experience of the Holocaust initiates a new, feminist response to the Holocaust.

The Special Item in this volume, an article by Shalom Sabar on the earliest illustrated Esther Scroll by Shalom Italia, is an illuminating insight into early modern Jewish art in the making. Also included are exhibition and book reviews.

Ars Judaica is an annual publication of the Department of Jewish Art at Bar-Ilan University. It showcases the Jewish contribution to the visual arts and architecture from antiquity to the present from a variety of perspectives, including history, iconography, semiotics, psychology, sociology, and folklore. As such it is a valuable resource for art historians, collectors, curators, and all those interested in the visual arts.

Volumes of Ars Judaica are distributed by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization throughout the world, except Israel. Orders and enquiries from Israeli customers should be directed to: Ars Judaica, Department of Jewish Art, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, Telephone 03 5318413; Fax 036359241; Email ajudaica@mail.biu.ac.il



Table of Contents
Editor's Note
BRACHA YANIV

Botanics and Iconography: Images of the Lulav and the Etrog
RIVKA BEN-SASSON
A Note on the Hebrew Script in Christian Art between Wroclaw and Lviv
IWONA BRZEWSKA and WALDEMAR DELUGA
The Havdalah Candle-holder
MICHELE KLEIN
Social Concern and Tikkun Olam in Jewish American Art
MATTHEW BAIGELL
'I am Jussuf of Egypt': Orientalism in Else Lasker-Schüler’s Drawings
ASTRID SCHMETTERLING
'These Threads Captured Shadows': Sewing and Embroidery in Holocaust Art Works of Contemporary Jewish Women Artists
MOR PRESIADO

Special Item
A New Discovery: The Earliest Illustrated Esther Scroll by Shalom Italia
SHALOM SABAR

Exhibition Review
Hommage à Lucien Hervé
MÁRTA NAGY

Book Reviews
Mati Meyer, An Obscure Portrait: Imaging Women's Reality in Byzantine Art
ELISHEVA BAUMGARTEN
Marc Michael Epstein, The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative, and Religious Imagination
KATRIN KOGMAN-APPEL
Herbert L. Kessler and David Nirenberg, Judaism and Christian Art: Aesthetic Anxieties from the Catacombs to Colonialism
KATHY ARON-BELLER
Jewish Dimensions in Modern Visual Culture
ESTHER LEVINGER
Musya Glants, Where Is My Home? The Art and Life of the Russian Jewish Sculptor, Mark Antokolsky, 1843–1902
JOHN E. BOWLT


Ars Judaica: The Bar-Ilan Journal of Jewish Art, Volume 8

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    A Paperback by Bracha Yaniv, Mirjam Rajner, Ilia Rodov

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      View other formats and editions of Ars Judaica: The Bar-Ilan Journal of Jewish Art, Volume 8 by Bracha Yaniv

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 26/04/2012
      ISBN13: 9781906764340, 978-1906764340
      ISBN10:

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Bringing to light little-known artistic traditions, the latest volume of Ars Judaica focuses on the local and temporal contexts of objects and their images and explores collective and personal memories and identities in art.

      Rivka Ben-Sasson examines modes of symbolic perception of nature prevalent in religious thought and art by analysing images of the lulav and etrog. Iwona Brzewska and Waldemar Deluga discuss the significance of Hebrew script in paintings and prints of the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries originating from the borderland between the Catholic and Christian Orthodox domains of eastern Europe. Michelle Klein studies the typological development of the havdalah candle-holder, based on an analysis of 170 examples. Matthew Baigell suggests that American Jewish artists are characterized by concern for the betterment of humankind; his sources include Jewish postcards, photographs, and caricatures as well as the work of contemporary American Jewish artists. Astrid Schmetterling discusses how Else Lasker-Schüler’s Orientalism offered a serious aesthetic-political challenge to both German and Jewish society. Mor Presiado argues that the contemporary use of sewing and embroidery by contemporary Jewish women artists to depict women’s experience of the Holocaust initiates a new, feminist response to the Holocaust.

      The Special Item in this volume, an article by Shalom Sabar on the earliest illustrated Esther Scroll by Shalom Italia, is an illuminating insight into early modern Jewish art in the making. Also included are exhibition and book reviews.

      Ars Judaica is an annual publication of the Department of Jewish Art at Bar-Ilan University. It showcases the Jewish contribution to the visual arts and architecture from antiquity to the present from a variety of perspectives, including history, iconography, semiotics, psychology, sociology, and folklore. As such it is a valuable resource for art historians, collectors, curators, and all those interested in the visual arts.

      Volumes of Ars Judaica are distributed by the Littman Library of Jewish Civilization throughout the world, except Israel. Orders and enquiries from Israeli customers should be directed to: Ars Judaica, Department of Jewish Art, Bar-Ilan University, Ramat-Gan 52900, Telephone 03 5318413; Fax 036359241; Email ajudaica@mail.biu.ac.il



      Table of Contents
      Editor's Note
      BRACHA YANIV

      Botanics and Iconography: Images of the Lulav and the Etrog
      RIVKA BEN-SASSON
      A Note on the Hebrew Script in Christian Art between Wroclaw and Lviv
      IWONA BRZEWSKA and WALDEMAR DELUGA
      The Havdalah Candle-holder
      MICHELE KLEIN
      Social Concern and Tikkun Olam in Jewish American Art
      MATTHEW BAIGELL
      'I am Jussuf of Egypt': Orientalism in Else Lasker-Schüler’s Drawings
      ASTRID SCHMETTERLING
      'These Threads Captured Shadows': Sewing and Embroidery in Holocaust Art Works of Contemporary Jewish Women Artists
      MOR PRESIADO

      Special Item
      A New Discovery: The Earliest Illustrated Esther Scroll by Shalom Italia
      SHALOM SABAR

      Exhibition Review
      Hommage à Lucien Hervé
      MÁRTA NAGY

      Book Reviews
      Mati Meyer, An Obscure Portrait: Imaging Women's Reality in Byzantine Art
      ELISHEVA BAUMGARTEN
      Marc Michael Epstein, The Medieval Haggadah: Art, Narrative, and Religious Imagination
      KATRIN KOGMAN-APPEL
      Herbert L. Kessler and David Nirenberg, Judaism and Christian Art: Aesthetic Anxieties from the Catacombs to Colonialism
      KATHY ARON-BELLER
      Jewish Dimensions in Modern Visual Culture
      ESTHER LEVINGER
      Musya Glants, Where Is My Home? The Art and Life of the Russian Jewish Sculptor, Mark Antokolsky, 1843–1902
      JOHN E. BOWLT


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