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#Philadelphia Museum of Art6
  • Detail image from 'Zamach' ('Assassination'), 2011, by Yael Bartana, from the trilogy 'And Europe Will Be Stunned.'
    Detail image from 'Zamach' ('Assassination'), 2011, by Yael Bartana, from the trilogy 'And Europe Will Be Stunned.'
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    Jewish Pioneers Return to Poland

    A new exhibit of works by the activist-artist Yael Bartana at the Philadelphia Museum of Art stars her video trilogy ‘And Europe Will Be Stunned.’ Was it a glimpse of a neo-Zionist utopian future, or a relic of a disappearing past?

    byJ. Hoberman
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    Should Jews Be Envious of Koreans?

    A Philadelphia exhibit of 500 years of Korea’s Joseon dynasty poses questions about insular societies and art

    byPaul Fishbane
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    Outsider Art Assimilates

    Jill and Sheldon Bonovitz pass their collection of works by untrained artists to the Philadelphia Museum of Art

    byPaul Fishbane
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    Film Theory

    Agenda: Tovah Feldshuh gets old, New York City dines out for farmers, the Klezmatics play Prague, and more

    byStephanie Butnick
  • Details from The Supper at Emmaus, 1648; Head of Christ, c.1648-56; Portrait of a Young Jew, c. 1648(Musée du Louvre; Philadelphia Museum of Art, John G. Johnson Collection, 1917; Staatliche Museen zu Berlin)
    Details from The Supper at Emmaus, 1648; Head of Christ, c.1648-56; Portrait of a Young Jew, c. 1648(Musée du Louvre; Philadelphia Museum of Art, John G. Johnson Collection, 1917; Staatliche Museen zu Berlin)
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    Head On

    An exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art searches for the Jewish roots of Rembrandt’s Jesus and revisits the Dutch master’s misunderstood relationship with Judaism

    byRobin Cembalest
  • Marc Chagall, Paris Through the Window (Paris par la fenêtre), 1913.(Philadelphia Museum of Art. Image courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.)
    Marc Chagall, Paris Through the Window (Paris par la fenêtre), 1913.(Philadelphia Museum of Art. Image courtesy of the Philadelphia Museum of Art.)
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    Hasidic Cubism

    A new exhibition highlights how Marc Chagall was both a part of and apart from the avant-garde movements that defined the Parisian art scene in the years before and after World War I

    byJonathan Wilson
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