Images of Prayer, Politics, & Everyday Life
Web Exhibits - Special Collections Research Center The University of Chicago Library
  • Introduction

  • Early Books on Judaism
  • Johann Buxtorf
  • Paul Christian Kirchner
  • Bernard Picart
  • The Sabbath
  • The High Holidays
  • Feast of Tabernacles
  • Passover Preparations
  • Passover Seder
  • The Haggadah
  • Haggadot Facsimiles
  • Ben Shahn Haggadah
  • Study and Worship
  • The Synagogue
  • The Traditional Jewish Wedding
  • Scenes of Daily Life
  • Images of Jews at Work
  • Simon Karczmar
  • Moritz Oppenheim
  • Alphonse Lévy
  • Ruth et Booz
  • Arthur Szyk

  • Exhibit Checklist
  • About this Exhibit
  • Rights and Reproductions

Simon Karczmar

Born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1903, Simon Karczmar studied art in Paris, where he lived for twenty years. Although he left France for Israel in 1962, most of his work evokes his experiences in Eastern Europe.

In this series of images known collectively as Shtetl, Karczmar draws inspiration from his childhood memories of the vacations he spent at his grandfather's house in Lithuania. The word shtetl is Yiddish for little town and refers to the villages with significant Jewish populations that could once be found throughout Eastern Europe.

The nostalgia of Karczmar's renderings contrasts with the darker views of life for Jews revealed in the photographs by Vishniac and drawings of Lilien. While the photographs in The Vanished World seem to emphasize the deprivation experienced by Jews in the years leading up to World War II, Karczmar depicts similar scenes yet focuses on the sense of community and tradition.

Simon Karczmar. Shtetl.  Israel: [s.n., n.d.]. 1. Simon Karczmar. Shtetl.  Israel: [s.n., n.d.].
Simon Karczmar. Shtetl.  Israel: [s.n., n.d.]. 1. Simon Karczmar. Shtetl.  Israel: [s.n., n.d.].
Images of Prayer, Politics, & Everyday Life From the Harry and Branka Sondheim Jewish Heritage Collection
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