2 Volumes of Ben Shahn's 'Paintings' and 'Graphic Art,' Edited by Soby, Reveal Artist's Accomplishments Ben Shahn was only 8 when he came to the United States from his native Kovno in 1906, but at that early age he already was drawing. While attending night high school, he worked as a lithographer's apprentice. He thus began his career as an artist very early, and his rise was rapid. Today he is one of the unchallenged great graphic artists and painters. On Sept. 20, The Jewish News carried a review of his most unusual typographical art book, "The Alphabet of Creation," (Pantheon Books), based on a legend about the Hebrew alpha- bet in the Zohar. Now there has been made available a two-volume set of the most. impressive of Ben Shahn's works. George Brazil- ler, Inc., (215 Fourth, NY3), ginning of Shahn's awareness of what art could and should be for him, he took his first decided step forward in 1931, when he completed 12 border illustrations for an edition of the Hagadah. Previously he had made 10 lithographs to il- lustrate DeQuincey's e s s a y, Levana,' from `Suspiria De Profundis,' but these had been rather mannered and had shown a residual influence from such members of the School of Paris as Roualt. In the Hagadah il- lustrations, on the contrary, Shahn's own personality com- mences to break through the overlay of acquired stylization and to reveal an idiosyncratic impulse." Shahn was influenced by "the patent injustice" of the Sacco- Vanzetti trial and his feelings were reflected by a series of pictures. Then came the Tom Mooney case, the depression, the war and subsequent events, many of which left their mark on the artist and his work. Shahn's moody "Heighten- ed with the end of the war. Some "w id el y emotional" paintings resulted. Through- out, however, one of the art- ist's marked characteristics is his sense of humor. There are some drawings and paintings that can be classed among the best topics for most humor- ous cartoons. BEN SHAHN'S THIRD ALLEGORY has just published "Ben Shahn: Paintings" and "Ben Sh?hn: His Graphic Art," and both works are prefaced by scholar- ly evaluations of the artist's works by an authority, James Thrall Soby. • Shahn had imbibed much from his early environment, from his childhood and from the Jewish impressions which left indelible marks upon him. This becomes evident at once in the reproduction, in the thoroughly fascinating Bra- ziller books, of the Hebrew scripts, the artist's ideas about the Shofar (Ram's Horn), the Menorah, and other Jew- ish designs. In a 22-page introduction in which he reviews Shahn's life work and his artistic achieve- ments, Soby describes the im- poverished circumstances of the artist's life in Brooklyn. We learn that "as a very young child in Russia he had' drawn incessantly, and in Brooklyn he was often f or c e d by local toughs to make sidewalk chalk sketches of various heroes of the sports world of the day." For a thorough understand- ing of the great artist, it is well to note Soby's additional com- ment at this point: "It is safe to assume that the drawings were not made entirely under duress. Shahn has always had a pro- found interest in flamboyant, contemporary personalities and in recording them with imagin- ative rather than literal preci- sion." That did not prevent him from expressing himself when he painted or drew figures from ages long past. Among his most striking watercolors is one of Maimonides. Soby writes about it: "The pic- ture's careful delicacy of de- tail calls to mind once more the thoroughness of Shahn's technical training as a gra- phic artist; once more he in- vests typography with a cour- ageous and inventive profi- ciency." The first color plate in "Shahn: Paintings" is a page of illustrated Hagadah, and this is Soby's explanation of Shahn's rapid progress as an artist: "If 1929 marked the be- an Among the 96 reproductions of his paintings in the volume "Paintings," in addition to. "Maimonides" as well as a de- tail of the 1VIaimonidean work, is "Third Allegory," described by Soby as "thoroughly per- sonal and fanciful," and as: "The ox bearing the slabs of the Ten Commandments be- comes a chimerical beast wear- ing a blanket, and behind it stands a hooded figure blowing a ram's horn. The hieroglyphics of the Commandments hold the center of the composition, be- tween . the hands of the figure and the animal's head with bared fangs and tongue thrust out. The image is memorable, and it typifies the cultural profundity which accounts in part for the richness of Shahn's art." Regarding "Third Allegory" we also are told that "the pic- ture refers in symbolic terms to the story of the ark of the covenant. a story that had af- fected Shahn deeply in his youth. as he has said in the f o 11 owing reminiscence: 'In Russia I went to a Jewish school, of course, where we really rend the Old Testament. That story was about the ark being brought into the temple, --------- Salem and Plymouth, Mass., Jewries hauled by six white oxen, and balanced on a single pole, so to test their faith He gave orders that no one was to touch it, no matter what happened. One man saw it beginning to totter, and he rushed up to help. He was struck dead. I re- (Special to The Jewish News) fused to go to school for a SALEM, Mass. — There is no week after we read that story. evidence of the witches or the It seemed so damned unfair. witch-hunts here now. There And it still does.' " are, h ow e v e r, evidences of progress made by the Jewish The Hebrew "Third Alpha- community. bet" in "'Paintings" is worth noting. It must be linked While the number of Salem with two important reproduc- Jews has declined, it is due to tions in Shahn's "Graphic the trek towards the suburbs. Art,"—"Alphabet" and "Sec- Nearby Marblehead and Swamp- ond Alphabet." Together, the scott have sizeable Jewish com- trio makes a magnificent col- munities. There is a fine Jewish lection of the artist's impres- school, good adult education sions of Hebrew lettering. courses, and Marblehead now "The Defaced Portrait," 1955, has three new synagogues. is taken from the collection of In the Salem Peabody Museum the Hoke Levins of Detroit. there are old p r i n is of the The Detroit Art Institute also SS Judah Touro, the ship that possesses Shahn art works. was owned and named for the "Ram's Horn and Menorah," Jewish philanthropist in whose also with Hebrew lettering, is name the Newport synagogue among the other impressive now is a national shrine. Shahn paintings. The bibliogra- PLYMOUTH, Mass. — Hebrew phy of Shahn's writings and statements is a valuable addi- was popular in colonial times, tion to the volume entitled as is evidenced by the inscrip- "Paintings" and leads to a tion on the grave of the Massa- fuller understanding the Shahn chusetts colony's second gover- creations. Soby's introductory text in "Ben Shahn: His Graphic Art" is much briefer than the essay in "Paintings." It comprises 11 pages, but it adds to the understanding of Shahn's works. As Soby ex- plains, Shahn's graphic art "no less than his paintings has alternated between real- ism and heraldry, between acute observation with satiri- cal overtones and lyric inven- tion." "As a humorist," Soby states, "Shahn has long been inter- ested in the temperamental ex- tremes of rage and conviviality." The portraits of Dr. Robert J. Oppenheimer, Sigmund Freud, Albert Einstein, Lincoln and other notables enriches "Graphic Arts." - In addition to the two Alpha- bets, this notable work includes the following Hebraic drawings: Where There's a Book, a repro- duction from The Alphabet of Creation (Pantheon), Today Is the Birthday of the World, Tablets of the Law With Lion. The two Shahn books are the most impressive art collec- tions imaginable. Soby's descrip- tions and evaluations of the works add much significance to the collections by one of the most noted artists. The two Braziller books are truly a combined treasure. —P. S. Ben-Gurion Announces Project to Establish College in Neoev SDE BOKER, (JTA)---Former Visitors arriving by car were iPrime Minister David Ben-Gurion stopped some distance from Ben- celebrated his 77th birthday at 1 Gurion's house by a huge sign his home here by receiving a which declared: "If the Old Man host of visitors and well-wishers, walks, you can walk too. Leave including President Shazar and your car here and proceed on Premier Levi Eshkol, and by tak- foot." The visitors, -some of ing part - in a variety of events, whom had arrived by plane, gath- including the groundbreaking ered in the kibbutz dining hall ceremonies for the establishment where toasts were drunk to Ben of a library at this settlement Gurion with cups of fruit juice. which, he announced, would be Among the events in which part of what he described as an the former Premier took part "Israeli Oxford," a projected was a festive meeting of the College of the Negev. Histadrut, Israel's labor/ federa- The project is sponsored by tion, at which Secretary General the non-partisan Negev Founda- Aharon Becker announced that tion which set as a goal a five- the Histadrut would publish a year construction plan to Cost an volume of Ben-Gurion's writings estimated two or three million on the Israel labor movement. pounds per year for a college Other events included a meeting which would accommodate 1,000 of the Mapai Leadership Bureau students. at which Premier Eshkol pre- The library, construction of sided; the first showing of the which will begin next week, will film, "Ben-Gurion—the Man and include Ben - Gurion's library. i His Epoch"; a meeting of the Funds for the project have been Bible Circle with President contributed by various groups in- Shazar presiding and a meeting cluding Bnai Brith and the Hista- of the board of governors of the Negev Foundation. drut of North America. Jewish Committee Publishes Study on Vandalism in N.Y. • NEW YORK, (JTA) — A Co- lumbia University study, fi- nanced by the American Jewish Committee, has established 'that the young vandals who daubed swastikas on Jewish religious buildings in New York during the wave of swastika smearing at the end of 1959 were general- ly of normal intelligence but came from low delinquency areas and did poorly at school. The study analyzed 91 inci- dents in the city, including de- facement of Jewish property, bomb threats, threatening letters and assaults on Jews. About 60 per cent were found to be anti- Semitic. Of the b_oys who were investigated, 43 had been in- volved in 17 incidents. nor, William Bradford, in Bury- ing Hill, the oldest U. S. ceme- tery. On Bradford's grave were inscribed three Hebrew words, now illegible. They are believed to stand for the excerpt from Psalm 27: "The Lord is the light of my life." Plymouth's Jewish commun- ity, while it numbers only about 215, is devoted to its school and synagogue. There are amicable Christian-Jewish relations here. Hebrew Corner The Legend of the Thirty-Five Today they are a legend. Today they are a poem. Today they rest in -peace under the tombstone! ....This is a legend about 35 young men who lie under tombstones. Fif- teen years ago, a platoon of 35 young men went out to break through a passage to the Etzion Block. The fighting was difficult. The people of the Etzion Block were few in number. They did not have ammunition. The young men, stu- dents of the Hebrew University, tried to save the Block. They tried to pass through in the dark of the night. On the way, they met an old Arab. They pitied him and did not kill him, but let him continue on his way. However, the old man re- turned to his village. He called for the- help of hundreds of people from the area, that closed the way before the group of thirty-five. The battle continued for a whole day, between the 35 youths and the hundreds of villagers. The youth fought untilthe last bullet. When had m eso. rie bullets, fought with l n soton oamoengnouseertaa..endfi ifitiwas tiinposanlye g,to hgmbronl oe their guns, - so as g nojt hands of o the. enemy. And dien, continued to fighit.‘, The young nienc they fell dead on the rocks sanetfise BlJouclit a.h, on the way to the Hills Etzion f Today the last battle of the thirty-five is told as a legend of a long time ago. Today the fighters lie under the cold tombstones. Only old parents remember the young sons, throughout . the long days, the year round. ..._On the spot where the 35 young men fell arose an additional monu- ment, a living monument — "The Lane of the Thirty-Five" — a new settlement near the Hills of Hebron. Translation of Hebrew column published by Brith Ivrith Olamith, O Jerusalem. 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