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Samuel Hirszenberg

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Known for
  
Painting

Movement
  
Realism

Name
  
Samuel Hirszenberg


Samuel Hirszenberg httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Born
  
February 22, 1865 (
1865-02-22
)
Lodz, Poland

Notable work
  
The Wandering Jew, Exile, The Sabbath Rest, The Eternal Jew

Died
  
September 15, 1908, Jerusalem, Israel

Education
  
Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts

Samuel Hirszenberg (also Shmuel Hirschenberg) (Łódź, February 22, 1865 – September 15, 1908, Jerusalem) was a Polish-Jewish realist painter active in the late 19th and early 20th century.

Samuel Hirszenberg httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons77

Biography

Samuel Hirszenberg Samuel Hirszenberg Wikipedia

Shmuel (Samuel) Hirszenberg was born in 1865, the eldest son of a weaving mill worker in Polish Łódź. Against the will of his father, but thanks to the financial assistance of a doctor, he chose to be an artist. At the age of 15 he began his studies at the Academy of Fine Arts in Kraków, where he was heavily influenced by the realistic painting of Jan Matejko.

Samuel Hirszenberg Samuel Hirszenberg

After two years of training in Kraków, he continued his studies from 1885-1889 at the Royal Academy of Arts in Munich. In his first major work, "Jeschibah" (1887), he experienced some attention. After an exhibition at the Kunstverein Munich (1889), he showed at the art exhibition in Paris and was awarded a silver medal. In Paris, he completed his artistic training at the Académie Colarossi.

Samuel Hirszenberg Samuel Hirszenberg 18651908 Ben Uri gallery website

In 1891, Hirszenberg returned to Poland. In 1893 he resettled in his hometown of Łódź. While the images of the early years, like the paintings: Talmudic Studies, Sabbathnachmittag, Uriel Acosta and the Jewish cemetery, a certain kinship with the Jewish genre painting by Leopold Horowitz, Isidor Kaufmann and Maurycy Gottlieb, can be assigned to the later rather the symbolism. Themes of the "tearful" Jewish history came to the fore. Noteworthy are the three most famous pictures of this period: Wandering Jew (1899), Exile (1904) and Czarny Sztandar / Black Flag (1905).

Samuel Hirszenberg FileDome of the rock 1908 by Samuel Hirszenbergjpg Wikimedia

For more than four years he occupied himself with the large painting "The Eternal Jew" before he showed it in 1900 in the Paris Salon. Disappointed by the poor response in Paris and the rejection in Munich and Berlin, he retired for health reasons. In 1901, he went for a year on a trip to Italy. In 1904, Hirszenberg moved to Kraków. In 1907, he immigrated to Palestine and began to work as a lecturer at the newly founded Bezalel School in Jerusalem, headed by Boris Schatz. After a short and intense creative period, he died in 1908 in Jerusalem.

References

Samuel Hirszenberg Wikipedia