fbpx
Wikipedia

Jewish Painters of Montreal

Jewish Painters of Montreal refers to a group of artists who depicted the social realism of Montreal during the 1930s and 1940s. First used by the media to describe participants of the annual YMHA-YWHA art exhibition, the term was popularized in the 1980s as the artists were exhibited collectively in public galleries across Canada.[1] In 2009 the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec mounted a touring exhibition Jewish Painters of Montreal: A Witness to Their Time, 1930–1948,[2] which renewed interest in the group in Montreal,[3] Toronto,[4] and Vancouver.[5]

This collective included two generations of painters — established artists: Jack Beder (1910–1987), Alexander Bercovitch (1891–1951), Eric Goldberg (1890–1959), Louis Muhlstock (1904–2001); those in mid-career: Sam Borenstein (1908–1969), Herman Heimlich (1904–1986), Harry Mayerovitch (1910–2004), Bernard Mayman (1885–1966), Ernst Neumann (1907–1956), Fanny Wiselberg (1906–1986); and those just beginning: Sylvia Ary (1923–2011), Rita Briansky (1925), Ghitta Caiserman-Roth (1923–2005), Alfred Pinsky (1921–1999), and Moses "Moe" Reinblatt (1917–1979).[1]: 28  As a group during the 30s and 40s, they were united in their choice of subjects — the human figure, Montreal and its people, and the war.[2] As individual artists, their style varied from socialist realism to stylized expressionism with some the subject of recent museum exhibitions in Montreal, Ottawa or New York.

History edit

These artists were either new arrivals from Eastern Europe or children of immigrants from that region. All were trained artists with a deep appreciation of impressionism and post-impressionism.[6] Most lived east of Mount Royal in Montreal's Jewish neighbourhood where, by 1926, Bercovitch, Mulstock and Reinblatt met informally at Bernard Mayman’s sign store on St Lawrence Boulevard.[1]: 219  Following the opening of the new YMHA (Young Men's Hebrew Association) on Mount Royal Avenue in 1929, the group became associated with its annual art exhibition. As the Depression of the 1930s deepened, many of these artists found themselves in reduced circumstances. Louis Mulstock used discarded sugar sacks as canvas, while in 1936 Bercovitch took a teaching position at the YWHA (Young Women's Hebrew Association). There he instructed a new generation of artists including daughter Sylvia Ary, Ghitta Caisserman and Rita Briansky,[1]: 221  all of whom included in the annual YMHA-YWHA art exhibition. Although there were discussions on creating a formal organization of Jewish Artists, as Bercovitch, Goldberg, Muhlstock, Mayervitch and Reinblatt were members of the 1938 Eastern Group of Painters and/or the 1939 Contemporary Arts Society, they were prohibited from other affiliations.[1]: 275 

Many of these artists had socialistic leanings which was reflected in their art. Bercovitch had married Russian revolutionary Bryna Avrutick in 1915[7] and was hired to teach art in Turkestan by Wassily Kandinsky, then the Soviet Commisaire for Art and Theatre, in 1922.[1]: 219  Muhlstock identified with the working class and referred to his imagery as "proletarian art",[8] He later described his choice of subject matter as "something I had known and experienced and seen, and so it was the thing I wanted to express".[9] Harry Mayerovitch wrote on social issues such as Montreal housing in the leftist Canadian Forum (Toronto): "Nothing has been done to alleviate the overcrowding of low wage earners; nothing to render slum property a less profitable investment; nothing to provide new housing for that shockingly large proportion of our population which lives in sub-standard dwellings ...".[10] Of the younger generation, Caiserman (after 1964 Caiserman-Roth) was the daughter of Hananiah Meir Caiserman, a union organizer and Po’alei Zion (Labor Zionism) activist[11] while Alfred Pinsky was the son of an American communist leader.[1]: 263  In the late 30s and early 40s, Caisserman, Pinsky and Briansky attended the Art Students League of New York where they studied under muralist Harry Sternberg of the Federal Art Project. In New York they were exposed to the work of Mexican artists Diego Rivera and José Clemente Orozco and the social purpose of art was debated in both America and Canada. In 1941, Reinblatt viewed Orozco's 1932 mural in New York on his honeymoon while in 1948 both Caiserman and Pinsky, then married, traveled to Mexico to study mural art.[1]: 264 

These artists also responded to the degradation of human rights in Nazi-Germany and Quebec's restrictive 1937 Padlock Law against socialist and communists.[12] During the 30s, Muhlstock who was a member of the Canadian League Against War and Fascism later commented: "Perhaps if the war wasn’t on I might not have gone in that direction, you see." As Canada's military commitment deepened, World War 2 became a topic for paintings, cartoons and political posters. Mayerovitch, appointed art director for the National Film Board of Canada in 1940, produced many soviet-style posters,[1]: 245  while Reinblatt enlisted in the Royal Canadian Airforce in 1942 and was an official Canadian War Artist by 1944.[13] In 1945 Pinsky as union representative with the Royal Canadian Navy[1]: 207  also choose war as a subject matter, but like Mulstock and Reinblatt depicted the workers behind the war effort rather than combat. Muhlstock’s Female Worker, Rear View (1943), of a female worker dressed in coveralls depicted the gender equality of workers during the war years.[4]

During the 30s and 40s, these artists exhibited in prominent venues of the day. All, with the exception of Sylvia Ary, exhibited at The Art Association of Montreal (now the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts annual exhibitions.[1]: 275  In the mid 30s Mulstock exhibited with the Canadian Group of Painters in Toronto and along with Beder, Bercovitch, Borenstein, Goldberg, Mayman, and Wiselberg with the Contemporary Arts Society of Montreal.[1]: 276  By 1948 the more senior artists of the group: Beder, Bercovitch, Borenstein, Heimlich, Mayervitch, Muhlstock, Neumann, and Reinblatt had all exhibited with the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts.[1]: 276  Members of this group were also represented in the 40s by Montreal gallerist Rose Millman first at Dominion Gallery and after 1948 at West End Gallery. After the YM-YWHA moved from the downtown core in 1950, West End Gallery increasingly served as a meeting place.[1]: 14 

Recognition edit

1930–1949 edit

In the early 1930s Bercovitch, Muhlstock and Borenstein were recognized artists. In 1933 Bercovitch held his first solo exhibition at Sydney Carter Gallery[14] which was reviewed favourably by Henri Girard.[15] Mulhstock, considered one of the finest draughtsmen in the country. was singled out for his sensitive depictions of individuals by Montreal art critic Robert Ayre of The Gazette. IBy the mid-30s 1935 they were reviewed collectively in the Canadian Forum (Toronto): "The subject matter of [Louis Muhlstock, Alexander Bercovitch, and Sam Borenstein] is similar: they paint the Montreal ghetto, tramp steamers in the harbour, street scenes, typical workers and members of the lumpen proletariat.... Muhlstock and Borenstein link their preoccupations closely with political awareness, though neither has as yet participated in the revolutionary movement."[16] By this time, many were mentioned in the reviews of the Art Society of Montreal, while the Annual YM-YWHA art exhibition drew favorable reviews in the English press.[1]: 184–185  Respected as innovators in subject matter or form, by 1948 artists Beder, Bercovitch, Borenstein, Heimlich, Mayervitch, Muhlstock, Neumann, and Reinblatt had all exhibited at the Royal Canadian Academy of Art exhibitions.[1]: 275 

1950–1999 edit

In 1959 these artists were featured at the Montreal Museum of Fine Art's exhibition Works by Canadian Jewish Artists.[17] Interest in the art of the 30s and 40s was renewed in the mid-70s with the publication of Barry Lord's Canadian Art: Towards a People's History and with the National Gallery of Canada's traveling exhibition Canadian Painting in the Thirties. While both featured work by Bercovitch, Muhlstock and Goldberg, only Lord included the younger Jewish Painters of Montreal. However, in 1987 Montreal art historian and curator Esther Trepanier mounted an exhibition of their collective work at the Saidye Bronfman Centre (Montreal) which toured Quebec, Ontario, Saskatchewan and Alberta and published Jewish Artists and Modernity.[1]: 12  This renewed attention led to the acquisition of over 150 of their works by public institutions including the National Gallery of Canada, The Canadian War Museum, Library and Archives Canada and the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.[18]

2000–present edit

In 2009, Esther Trépanier, as executive director of the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec mounted the touring exhibition Jewish Painters of Montreal. Witnesses of Their Time 1930-1948. When exhibited in Montreal in 2010 at the McCord Museum of Canadian History and the Leonard and Bina Ellen Gallery, Concordia University, the exhibition drew favorable reviews.[3][19] They are also exhibited frequently at West End Gallery.[20] As individual artists Briansky exhibited in the United Nations and at the National Art Gallery of Canada, Caiserman (after 1964 Caiserman-Roth), an elected member of the RCA was a recipient of the Governor General's Award for the visual arts in 2004.[11] A solo exhibition of Caiserman's work was held at the Art Gallery of Ottawa in 2008,[21] while a solo retrospective of Borenstein's work was exhibited at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, the University of Toronto in 2005[22] and at Yeshiva University in New York City in 2011.[23]

Contribution edit

As social realists, the Jewish Painters of Montreal combined streetscapes and figurative art with leftist ideals of social justice and worker solidarity.[2] In 1936 Toronto critic Graham McInnis of Saturday Night (magazine) wrote: "Mr. Muhlstock... is one of the leaders of that small group of Montreal painters who have found that it is possible to paint one's immediate environment – to see forms and relationships from one's back window – and at the same time to paint well, and in a manner as fine and as native in this country as the most gnarled and twisted pine of the most jagged rock in the North Country."[1]: 184  For art historian Esther Trépanier, these artists of the 30s and 40s "unequivocally produced works that, both in their formal exploration and in their more contemporary, urban subjects, contributed towards the definition of the particular form of modernity that emerged between the major nationalist movements and abstraction"[1]: 205  of Les Automatistes painters Paul-Émile Borduas and Jean-Paul Riopelle. For her, these Jewish artists offered a decidedly more 'international' way of looking at the Canadian scene'."[1]: 204  which, unlike their American and Mexican contemporaries, they adopted to distance themselves from the perceived nationalism of the Group of Seven. In terms of contribution, Trépanier has concluded that:

"The artists of the Jewish community not only helped to define cultural modernity in Quebec and the rest of Canada during the interwar period, but have continued to enrich and enhance the originality of its development ever since."[1]: 205 

Many were also respected educators. Berkovitch is considered "the father of modern Jewish painting in Montreal",[7] and his assistant, Reinblatt, continued to teach throughout his career. Pinsky established the fine art department at Sir George Williams (now Concordia) University where both he and Caisserman taught.[12] Briansky taught the Visual Art Centre and the Saidye Bronfman School of Fine Art in Montreal.[24]

Selected works in public collections edit

Political art edit

  • Alexandre Bercovitch, Petroushka (c. 1948)[25]
  • Harry Mayerovitch, Nurse writing a letter for a soldier in a hospital bed (c. 1940), The Balkan Powder Keg (1944), Coal Face, Canada (1943), War Birds (1943)[26]
  • Louis Muhlstock, Paranka (1932), William O'Brien Unemployed (c. 1935), Open Door of Third House, Grubert Lane, Montreal (c. 1939), Welder (1943)[27]
  • Ernst Neumann, The Beggar (1931), Unemployed No. 1 (1931),[28] Sawdust cart (1944)[29]
  • Moses Reinblatt,Weighing down the tail, New Brunswick (1945)[30]

Montreal portraits and scenes edit

  • Jack Beder, Painting Autumn Light, Redpath Avenue (1939), Boats at Harbour, Montreal (1933)[31]
  • Sam Borenstein, Vitré Street (1936)], Saint Dominique Street, Montreal (1942)[32]
  • Ernst Neumann, Afternoon in the park (1947)[33]
  • Louis Muhlstock, Three Heads (c. 1939), Winter Landscape (1942)[34]
  • Ernst Neumann, The Strong Man (1931) [A. Dandurand, Champ. Weight Lifter of Canada], Portrait of Harry Shane (1939),[35] Two men sitting on a bench[36]
  • Moses Reinblatt, Portrait of Alexander Bercovitch (1951), Woman & Skeins (1940-50), St. Joseph Blvd., Montreal (1941), St. Michael's Church, Montreal (1945)[37]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Trépanier, Esther (2008). Jewish Painters of Montreal: Witnesses of Their Time, 1930–1948. Montreal: Éditions de l'Homme.
  2. ^ a b c . McCord Museum of Canadian History. Archived from the original on 24 July 2014.
  3. ^ a b Callaghan, Lori "Witnesses to a bygone Montreal" The Gazette (Montreal). 27 Feb. 2010. Web. 2014-12-05 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ a b Kreindler, David.Artists Find a Haven in Montreal. 2014-12-24 at the Wayback Machine Shalom Life Feb 22 2010.
  5. ^ Novek, Joel. "Jewish Painters of Montreal: a Witness to their time" The Outlook. Vancouver Jul-Aug 2010.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Callaghan, Lori. Visual Arts from Painting to Performance Collectives, "The seeds of a community" 2014-05-23 at the Wayback Machine English Language Arts Network (ELAN).
  7. ^ a b "Interactive Museum of Jewish Montreal Alexandre Bercovitch - Residence.
  8. ^ Anreus, Alejandro, Linden, Diana L. and Weinberg, Jonathan. The Social and the Real: Political Art of the 1930s in the Western Hemisphere Penn State Press (Philadelphia). 2006. ISBN 978-0-271-02691-6 Web. 2014-12-04 at the Wayback Machine
  9. ^ Hill, Charles. "Interview with Louis Muhlstock (Artist) 15/09/1973". National Gallery of Canada
  10. ^ Mayerovitch, Harry. The Canadian Forum. May 1940. National Gallery of Canada. "Is Housing to Be Forgotten?" Web.
  11. ^ a b Jewish Women;s Archive "Ghitta Caiserman-Roth". Web
  12. ^ a b Herland, Karen. "Reminiscing about Jewish Montreal". Concordia Journal. Concordia University. Web
  13. ^ ARTSask, Moe Reinblatt. Web
  14. ^ National Gallery of Canada "Alexandre Bercovitch". Web
  15. ^ Hill, Charles C. "Interview with Sylvia Ary (Artist and daughter of artist Alexandre Bercovitch)" National Gallery of Canada. Web
  16. ^ The National Art Gallery of Canada. "A Cartoonist of the Left"
  17. ^ Exhibition catalogue. Exhibition of Works by Canadian Jewish Artists October 29 to November 15. Montreal Museum of Fine Art, 1959.
  18. ^ "John Donovan". Biferali Fine Art. Archived from the original on 23 December 2014.
  19. ^ Vanderstaay, Marilynn. Jewish life in the ’30s and ’40s celebrated at the McCord Westmount Examiner 15 Apr 2010.
  20. ^ Vanderstaay, Marilynn.West End showcases Jewish artists Westmount Examiner 18 Nov 2009.
  21. ^ Art Gallery of Ottawa. [1] 2013-09-16 at the Wayback Machine Web,
  22. ^ Dault, Gary Michael. "The joyous frenzy of Sam Borenstein". The Globe and Mail. 22 Oct 2005.
  23. ^ Official Sam Boreinstein Website Web
  24. ^ "Rita Prezament Briansky". AskArt.
  25. ^ "Alexandre Bercovitch". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  26. ^ "Harry Mayerovitch". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  27. ^ "Louis Muhlstock". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  28. ^ "Ernest Neumann". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  29. ^ "Ernest Neumann". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  30. ^ "Moses Reinblatt". Canadian War Museum, Ottawa. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  31. ^ "Jack Beder". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  32. ^ "Sam Borenstein". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  33. ^ "Ernest Neumann". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  34. ^ "Louis Muhlstock". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  35. ^ "Ernest Neumann". www.gallery.ca. National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  36. ^ "Ernest Neumann". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  37. ^ "Moe Reinblatt". collections.musee-mccord.qc.ca. McCord Museum, Montreal. Retrieved 2021-03-16.

Bibliography edit

  • Hill, Charles C. (1975). Canadian Painting in the Thirties. Ottawa: National Gallery of Canada. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  • Lord, Barry (1974). The History of Painting in Canada: Toward a People's Art. Toronto: NC Press. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  • Trépanier, Esther (1987). Jewish Painters and Modernity: Montreal, 1930–1945. Montreal: Saidye Bronfman Centre. Retrieved 2021-03-16.
  • Trépanier, Esther (2008). Jewish Painters of Montreal: Witnesses of Their Time, 1930–1948. Montreal: Éditions de l’Homme. Retrieved 2021-03-16.

External links edit

  • Collections Canada Alexander Bercovitch.
  • Collections Canada Louis Muhlstock.
  • National Gallery of Canada Sam Bornstein.
  • National Gallery of Canada Interview with Louis Muhlstock (Artist)
  • National Gallery of Canada Interview with Sylvia Ary (Artist and daughter of artist Alexandre Bercovitch)

jewish, painters, montreal, refers, group, artists, depicted, social, realism, montreal, during, 1930s, 1940s, first, used, media, describe, participants, annual, ymha, ywha, exhibition, term, popularized, 1980s, artists, were, exhibited, collectively, public,. Jewish Painters of Montreal refers to a group of artists who depicted the social realism of Montreal during the 1930s and 1940s First used by the media to describe participants of the annual YMHA YWHA art exhibition the term was popularized in the 1980s as the artists were exhibited collectively in public galleries across Canada 1 In 2009 the Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec mounted a touring exhibition Jewish Painters of Montreal A Witness to Their Time 1930 1948 2 which renewed interest in the group in Montreal 3 Toronto 4 and Vancouver 5 This collective included two generations of painters established artists Jack Beder 1910 1987 Alexander Bercovitch 1891 1951 Eric Goldberg 1890 1959 Louis Muhlstock 1904 2001 those in mid career Sam Borenstein 1908 1969 Herman Heimlich 1904 1986 Harry Mayerovitch 1910 2004 Bernard Mayman 1885 1966 Ernst Neumann 1907 1956 Fanny Wiselberg 1906 1986 and those just beginning Sylvia Ary 1923 2011 Rita Briansky 1925 Ghitta Caiserman Roth 1923 2005 Alfred Pinsky 1921 1999 and Moses Moe Reinblatt 1917 1979 1 28 As a group during the 30s and 40s they were united in their choice of subjects the human figure Montreal and its people and the war 2 As individual artists their style varied from socialist realism to stylized expressionism with some the subject of recent museum exhibitions in Montreal Ottawa or New York Contents 1 History 2 Recognition 2 1 1930 1949 2 2 1950 1999 2 3 2000 present 3 Contribution 4 Selected works in public collections 4 1 Political art 4 2 Montreal portraits and scenes 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory editThese artists were either new arrivals from Eastern Europe or children of immigrants from that region All were trained artists with a deep appreciation of impressionism and post impressionism 6 Most lived east of Mount Royal in Montreal s Jewish neighbourhood where by 1926 Bercovitch Mulstock and Reinblatt met informally at Bernard Mayman s sign store on St Lawrence Boulevard 1 219 Following the opening of the new YMHA Young Men s Hebrew Association on Mount Royal Avenue in 1929 the group became associated with its annual art exhibition As the Depression of the 1930s deepened many of these artists found themselves in reduced circumstances Louis Mulstock used discarded sugar sacks as canvas while in 1936 Bercovitch took a teaching position at the YWHA Young Women s Hebrew Association There he instructed a new generation of artists including daughter Sylvia Ary Ghitta Caisserman and Rita Briansky 1 221 all of whom included in the annual YMHA YWHA art exhibition Although there were discussions on creating a formal organization of Jewish Artists as Bercovitch Goldberg Muhlstock Mayervitch and Reinblatt were members of the 1938 Eastern Group of Painters and or the 1939 Contemporary Arts Society they were prohibited from other affiliations 1 275 Many of these artists had socialistic leanings which was reflected in their art Bercovitch had married Russian revolutionary Bryna Avrutick in 1915 7 and was hired to teach art in Turkestan by Wassily Kandinsky then the Soviet Commisaire for Art and Theatre in 1922 1 219 Muhlstock identified with the working class and referred to his imagery as proletarian art 8 He later described his choice of subject matter as something I had known and experienced and seen and so it was the thing I wanted to express 9 Harry Mayerovitch wrote on social issues such as Montreal housing in the leftist Canadian Forum Toronto Nothing has been done to alleviate the overcrowding of low wage earners nothing to render slum property a less profitable investment nothing to provide new housing for that shockingly large proportion of our population which lives in sub standard dwellings 10 Of the younger generation Caiserman after 1964 Caiserman Roth was the daughter of Hananiah Meir Caiserman a union organizer and Po alei Zion Labor Zionism activist 11 while Alfred Pinsky was the son of an American communist leader 1 263 In the late 30s and early 40s Caisserman Pinsky and Briansky attended the Art Students League of New York where they studied under muralist Harry Sternberg of the Federal Art Project In New York they were exposed to the work of Mexican artists Diego Rivera and Jose Clemente Orozco and the social purpose of art was debated in both America and Canada In 1941 Reinblatt viewed Orozco s 1932 mural in New York on his honeymoon while in 1948 both Caiserman and Pinsky then married traveled to Mexico to study mural art 1 264 These artists also responded to the degradation of human rights in Nazi Germany and Quebec s restrictive 1937 Padlock Law against socialist and communists 12 During the 30s Muhlstock who was a member of the Canadian League Against War and Fascism later commented Perhaps if the war wasn t on I might not have gone in that direction you see As Canada s military commitment deepened World War 2 became a topic for paintings cartoons and political posters Mayerovitch appointed art director for the National Film Board of Canada in 1940 produced many soviet style posters 1 245 while Reinblatt enlisted in the Royal Canadian Airforce in 1942 and was an official Canadian War Artist by 1944 13 In 1945 Pinsky as union representative with the Royal Canadian Navy 1 207 also choose war as a subject matter but like Mulstock and Reinblatt depicted the workers behind the war effort rather than combat Muhlstock s Female Worker Rear View 1943 of a female worker dressed in coveralls depicted the gender equality of workers during the war years 4 During the 30s and 40s these artists exhibited in prominent venues of the day All with the exception of Sylvia Ary exhibited at The Art Association of Montreal now the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts annual exhibitions 1 275 In the mid 30s Mulstock exhibited with the Canadian Group of Painters in Toronto and along with Beder Bercovitch Borenstein Goldberg Mayman and Wiselberg with the Contemporary Arts Society of Montreal 1 276 By 1948 the more senior artists of the group Beder Bercovitch Borenstein Heimlich Mayervitch Muhlstock Neumann and Reinblatt had all exhibited with the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts 1 276 Members of this group were also represented in the 40s by Montreal gallerist Rose Millman first at Dominion Gallery and after 1948 at West End Gallery After the YM YWHA moved from the downtown core in 1950 West End Gallery increasingly served as a meeting place 1 14 Recognition edit1930 1949 edit In the early 1930s Bercovitch Muhlstock and Borenstein were recognized artists In 1933 Bercovitch held his first solo exhibition at Sydney Carter Gallery 14 which was reviewed favourably by Henri Girard 15 Mulhstock considered one of the finest draughtsmen in the country was singled out for his sensitive depictions of individuals by Montreal art critic Robert Ayre of The Gazette IBy the mid 30s 1935 they were reviewed collectively in the Canadian Forum Toronto The subject matter of Louis Muhlstock Alexander Bercovitch and Sam Borenstein is similar they paint the Montreal ghetto tramp steamers in the harbour street scenes typical workers and members of the lumpen proletariat Muhlstock and Borenstein link their preoccupations closely with political awareness though neither has as yet participated in the revolutionary movement 16 By this time many were mentioned in the reviews of the Art Society of Montreal while the Annual YM YWHA art exhibition drew favorable reviews in the English press 1 184 185 Respected as innovators in subject matter or form by 1948 artists Beder Bercovitch Borenstein Heimlich Mayervitch Muhlstock Neumann and Reinblatt had all exhibited at the Royal Canadian Academy of Art exhibitions 1 275 1950 1999 edit In 1959 these artists were featured at the Montreal Museum of Fine Art s exhibition Works by Canadian Jewish Artists 17 Interest in the art of the 30s and 40s was renewed in the mid 70s with the publication of Barry Lord s Canadian Art Towards a People s History and with the National Gallery of Canada s traveling exhibition Canadian Painting in the Thirties While both featured work by Bercovitch Muhlstock and Goldberg only Lord included the younger Jewish Painters of Montreal However in 1987 Montreal art historian and curator Esther Trepanier mounted an exhibition of their collective work at the Saidye Bronfman Centre Montreal which toured Quebec Ontario Saskatchewan and Alberta and published Jewish Artists and Modernity 1 12 This renewed attention led to the acquisition of over 150 of their works by public institutions including the National Gallery of Canada The Canadian War Museum Library and Archives Canada and the Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec 18 2000 present edit In 2009 Esther Trepanier as executive director of the Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec mounted the touring exhibition Jewish Painters of Montreal Witnesses of Their Time 1930 1948 When exhibited in Montreal in 2010 at the McCord Museum of Canadian History and the Leonard and Bina Ellen Gallery Concordia University the exhibition drew favorable reviews 3 19 They are also exhibited frequently at West End Gallery 20 As individual artists Briansky exhibited in the United Nations and at the National Art Gallery of Canada Caiserman after 1964 Caiserman Roth an elected member of the RCA was a recipient of the Governor General s Award for the visual arts in 2004 11 A solo exhibition of Caiserman s work was held at the Art Gallery of Ottawa in 2008 21 while a solo retrospective of Borenstein s work was exhibited at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts the University of Toronto in 2005 22 and at Yeshiva University in New York City in 2011 23 Contribution editAs social realists the Jewish Painters of Montreal combined streetscapes and figurative art with leftist ideals of social justice and worker solidarity 2 In 1936 Toronto critic Graham McInnis of Saturday Night magazine wrote Mr Muhlstock is one of the leaders of that small group of Montreal painters who have found that it is possible to paint one s immediate environment to see forms and relationships from one s back window and at the same time to paint well and in a manner as fine and as native in this country as the most gnarled and twisted pine of the most jagged rock in the North Country 1 184 For art historian Esther Trepanier these artists of the 30s and 40s unequivocally produced works that both in their formal exploration and in their more contemporary urban subjects contributed towards the definition of the particular form of modernity that emerged between the major nationalist movements and abstraction 1 205 of Les Automatistes painters Paul Emile Borduas and Jean Paul Riopelle For her these Jewish artists offered a decidedly more international way of looking at the Canadian scene 1 204 which unlike their American and Mexican contemporaries they adopted to distance themselves from the perceived nationalism of the Group of Seven In terms of contribution Trepanier has concluded that The artists of the Jewish community not only helped to define cultural modernity in Quebec and the rest of Canada during the interwar period but have continued to enrich and enhance the originality of its development ever since 1 205 Many were also respected educators Berkovitch is considered the father of modern Jewish painting in Montreal 7 and his assistant Reinblatt continued to teach throughout his career Pinsky established the fine art department at Sir George Williams now Concordia University where both he and Caisserman taught 12 Briansky taught the Visual Art Centre and the Saidye Bronfman School of Fine Art in Montreal 24 Selected works in public collections editPolitical art edit Alexandre Bercovitch Petroushka c 1948 25 Harry Mayerovitch Nurse writing a letter for a soldier in a hospital bed c 1940 The Balkan Powder Keg 1944 Coal Face Canada 1943 War Birds 1943 26 Louis Muhlstock Paranka 1932 William O Brien Unemployed c 1935 Open Door of Third House Grubert Lane Montreal c 1939 Welder 1943 27 Ernst Neumann The Beggar 1931 Unemployed No 1 1931 28 Sawdust cart 1944 29 Moses Reinblatt Weighing down the tail New Brunswick 1945 30 Montreal portraits and scenes edit Jack Beder Painting Autumn Light Redpath Avenue 1939 Boats at Harbour Montreal 1933 31 Sam Borenstein Vitre Street 1936 Saint Dominique Street Montreal 1942 32 Ernst Neumann Afternoon in the park 1947 33 Louis Muhlstock Three Heads c 1939 Winter Landscape 1942 34 Ernst Neumann The Strong Man 1931 A Dandurand Champ Weight Lifter of Canada Portrait of Harry Shane 1939 35 Two men sitting on a bench 36 Moses Reinblatt Portrait of Alexander Bercovitch 1951 Woman amp Skeins 1940 50 St Joseph Blvd Montreal 1941 St Michael s Church Montreal 1945 37 References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Trepanier Esther 2008 Jewish Painters of Montreal Witnesses of Their Time 1930 1948 Montreal Editions de l Homme a b c Exposition Announcement 2010 McCord Museum of Canadian History Archived from the original on 24 July 2014 a b Callaghan Lori Witnesses to a bygone Montreal The Gazette Montreal 27 Feb 2010 Web Archived 2014 12 05 at the Wayback Machine a b Kreindler David Artists Find a Haven in Montreal Archived 2014 12 24 at the Wayback Machine Shalom Life Feb 22 2010 Novek Joel Jewish Painters of Montreal a Witness to their time The Outlook Vancouver Jul Aug 2010 permanent dead link Callaghan Lori Visual Arts from Painting to Performance Collectives The seeds of a community Archived 2014 05 23 at the Wayback Machine English Language Arts Network ELAN a b Interactive Museum of Jewish Montreal Alexandre Bercovitch Residence Anreus Alejandro Linden Diana L and Weinberg Jonathan The Social and the Real Political Art of the 1930s in the Western Hemisphere Penn State Press Philadelphia 2006 ISBN 978 0 271 02691 6 Web Archived 2014 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Hill Charles Interview with Louis Muhlstock Artist 15 09 1973 National Gallery of Canada Mayerovitch Harry The Canadian Forum May 1940 National Gallery of Canada Is Housing to Be Forgotten Web a b Jewish Women s Archive Ghitta Caiserman Roth Web a b Herland Karen Reminiscing about Jewish Montreal Concordia Journal Concordia University Web ARTSask Moe Reinblatt Web National Gallery of Canada Alexandre Bercovitch Web Hill Charles C Interview with Sylvia Ary Artist and daughter of artist Alexandre Bercovitch National Gallery of Canada Web The National Art Gallery of Canada A Cartoonist of the Left Exhibition catalogue Exhibition of Works by Canadian Jewish Artists October 29 to November 15 Montreal Museum of Fine Art 1959 John Donovan Biferali Fine Art Archived from the original on 23 December 2014 Vanderstaay Marilynn Jewish life in the 30s and 40s celebrated at the McCord Westmount Examiner 15 Apr 2010 Vanderstaay Marilynn West End showcases Jewish artists Westmount Examiner 18 Nov 2009 Art Gallery of Ottawa 1 Archived 2013 09 16 at the Wayback Machine Web Dault Gary Michael The joyous frenzy of Sam Borenstein The Globe and Mail 22 Oct 2005 Official Sam Boreinstein Website Web Rita Prezament Briansky AskArt Alexandre Bercovitch www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Harry Mayerovitch collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Louis Muhlstock www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Ernest Neumann www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Ernest Neumann collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Moses Reinblatt Canadian War Museum Ottawa Retrieved 2021 03 16 Jack Beder collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Sam Borenstein www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Ernest Neumann collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Louis Muhlstock www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Ernest Neumann www gallery ca National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Ernest Neumann collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Moe Reinblatt collections musee mccord qc ca McCord Museum Montreal Retrieved 2021 03 16 Bibliography edit Hill Charles C 1975 Canadian Painting in the Thirties Ottawa National Gallery of Canada Retrieved 2021 03 16 Lord Barry 1974 The History of Painting in Canada Toward a People s Art Toronto NC Press Retrieved 2021 03 16 Trepanier Esther 1987 Jewish Painters and Modernity Montreal 1930 1945 Montreal Saidye Bronfman Centre Retrieved 2021 03 16 Trepanier Esther 2008 Jewish Painters of Montreal Witnesses of Their Time 1930 1948 Montreal Editions de l Homme Retrieved 2021 03 16 External links editCollections Canada Alexander Bercovitch Collections Canada Louis Muhlstock National Gallery of Canada Sam Bornstein National Gallery of Canada Interview with Louis Muhlstock Artist National Gallery of Canada Interview with Sylvia Ary Artist and daughter of artist Alexandre Bercovitch Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jewish Painters of Montreal amp oldid 1217749096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.