Mark Gertler 1891-1939
Further images
The focus of the work is the relationship between the man and wife – without the title we would not know they are Rabbi and Rebbetzin – yoked together and anchored to their spartan surroundings. Their huge eyes increase their emotive appeal, while their enlarged hands, as in Gertler’s Portrait of the Artist’s Mother (1913, Glynn Vivian, Swansea), indicate suffering and a life that has known hardship. The picture, as a contemporary reviewer noted, also evokes the wider history of the Jewish diaspora: ‘A man and a woman with all the history of an oppressed people behind them […] the incisive and unflinching design […] controlled without loss to their humanity’.
Provenance
Acquired in 2002 by private treaty through Sotheby's with the assistance of Art Fund, HLF, V&A/MLA Purchase Grant Fund, Pauline and Daniel Auerbach, Sir Michael and Lady Heller, Agnes and Edward Lee, Hannah and David Lewis, David Stern, Laura and Barry Townsley, Della and Fred Worms and anonymous donorsExhibitions
Mark Gertler;Mark Gertler: Memorial Exhibition;Mark Gertler: A New Perspective;Mark Gertler Display Room;Mark Gertler: Paintings and Drawings;The Search for Identity: Immigrant Artists in Early Twentieth-century British art;New English Art Club (53rd exhibition);Meisterwerke Englische Malerei aus drei Jahrhunderten;The Mark Gertler Memorial ExhibitionLiterature
Noel Carrington, ed., "Mark Gertler: Selected Letters" (London: Rupert Hart-Davies, 1965), p. 84; John Woodeson, "Mark Gertler: Biography of a Painter, 1891-1939" (London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1972), pp. 127, 169, 184, 339-340, 365, pl. 15, Sarah MacDougall "Mark Gertler" (London: John Murray, 2002), pp. 121, 123-124.; Rachel Dickson and Sarah MacDougall, eds., 'Out of Chaos: Ben Uri; 100 Years in London' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2015) pp. 42-43.Be the first to know – Sign Up
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