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this is a cropped image of a painting by Modigliani titled Young Girl with a Shirt with Stripes produced in 1917.

Modigliani, Jeune Fille à la Chemise Rayée, 1917
Oil on canvas
(92 x 60 cm.) 36 1/4 x 23 6/8 in.
©Helly Nahmad Gallery NY

 

PARIS
MUSEE D'ART ET D'HISTOIRE DU JUDAÏSME
Chagall, Modigliani, Soutine... Paris as a school 1905-1940
June 17, 2021 - October 31, 2021

The Nahmad collection is pleased to contribute to Chagall, Modigliani, Soutine... Paris as a school 1905-1940

The School of Paris designates the artistic scene constituted by foreign artists from all over Europe and also the Americas, Asia and Africa. This cosmopolitism was unprecedented in art history.

Many of these men and women were Jewish artists who came from the major European cities and the Russian Empire in search of artistic, social and religious emancipation. They were not a “school” in the traditional sense since they had no common style but instead shared a history, an ideal and, for some, the same destiny.

Fleeing the pogroms or seeking a free, modern context, these young artists who converged on Paris included Marc Chagall, Chaim Soutine, Amedeo Modigliani, Jules Pascin, Jacques Lipchitz, Chana Orloff, Moïse Kisling, Louis Marcoussis and Ossip Zadkine, and also lesser known artists such as Walter Bondy, Henri Epstein, Adolphe Feder, Alice Halicka, Henri Hayden, Georges Kars, Léon Indenbaum, Simon Mondzain, Mela Muter and many others.

The musée d’art et d’histoire du Judaïsme is devoting an exhibition to this generation of artists who arrived in Paris between 1904 and 1914 and their destinies. It will explore the reasons for their installation there, the particular ties uniting them, the historical and political context of their work and, of course, their participation in the artistic scene in what was then the capital of modern art.