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Tel Aviv Museum of Art reconstructs 1907 Berlin exhibition of Jewish artists from across Europe
Updated: 30/Jun/2009 15:40
Maurycy Minkowski, After the Pogrom, 1905, oil on canvas. Collection of Tel Aviv Museum of Art.Gift of Michael Zagajski, Warsaw, 1936-1937.
Photo: Tel Aviv Museum of Art
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TEL AVIV (EJP)---The Tel Aviv Museum of Art has reconstructed an “Exhibition of Jewish Artists,” which opened in Berlin in 1907.

The original show featured over 200 works of painting and sculpture, and Judaica objects. 

Among the noted artists represented in the exhibition were Jozef Israëls, Lesser Ury, Camille Pissarro, Maurycy Gottlieb, Samuel Hirszenberg.

The Berlin show sought to answer questions such as: Do the Jews have an artistic talent? Do their works have something in common stemming from their “race”? Is a “specific Jewish art” gaining ground? 

In the opinion of the organizers of the exhibition, only a group exhibition of Jewish artists from different countries could provide an answer to these questions to impartial art historians. 

The present exhibition in Tel Aviv, entitled "Fragmented Mirror," has some 100 works of art by the same artists, and many of the same works exhibited in Berlin in 1907. 

More than half of the artworks are from the collection of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. 

The Tel Aviv exhibition, which will run through October 2009, provides a rare opportunity for the public to view works otherwise hidden away in the storerooms.

A café area in the Tel Aviv exhibition provides a fascinating insight into the period with letters from the artists to the 1907 exhibition committee, local press reviews and even satiric jokes and anti-Semitic broadsheets of the period.

Major funding for the exhibition was provided by The David Berg Foundation in New York.

 
“Fragmented Mirror"
at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art
27 Shaul Hamelech Boulevard
Tel Aviv
Israel
Sun closed, Mon, Wed 10-16 Tues, Thurs 10-22 Fri 10-14 Sat 10-16
 
Box Office: +972 3 6077020
Website :
 
 
 
 
 

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