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Around Jewish Art
Recherche : SZYLIS
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."
PART I Artists of Jewish Extraction Who Did Not Paint Judaic Scenes PART 2 List of artists of Jewish extraction who painted Jewish scenes or whose works came to reflect their attachment to their roots.
PART III There were also some non-Jewish artists who painted Judaic and Jewish scenes or went to work in Palestine and those who exhibited in Jewish institutions and museums as well as others who have not been identified as being Jewish for sure.
PART IV Sculptors and medallists Probably because of a reference in the Bible to Abraham destroying statues of pagan gods, Jewish artists refrained from producing sculptures representing humans until at least the 19th Century. It was only after 1880, when many Jews benefited from the emancipation process in Central and Eastern Europe that they felt inclined to turn to this form of art. Many Jewish artists worked as sculptors during the 19th and 20th Century, some of them became quite famous like Chana Orlov, Jacques Lipchitz, Elie Nadelman or Jacob Epstein among others.
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Szylis or Schilis (Shilish), Hirsch Hersz Herschel
Birth - Death : 1909?-1987
Nationality : Polish then Israeli
Szylis studied art in Lodz and Warsaw between 1932 and 1936. Considered as a prominent Polish artist before the war, he was held in the Lodz Ghetto, where he painted many scenes, which survive in collections at the Jewish Historical Institute in Warsaw and Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. He was also detained in the Nazi concentration camps of Auschwitz, Orianenburg, Flossenburg and Dachau, where he was finally liberated. Szylis studied in Munich in 1945 and in Paris from 1950 to 1956 before settling in Israel, where he continued to paint ghetto scenes from memory.
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