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Ben Uri, and a hundred years

July 2, 2015 16:20
Mark Gertler: Rabbi and Rabbitzin (1914)

ByDavid Glasser, David Glasser

3 min read

Ben Uri celebrates its remarkable centenary this month . One hundred years of the Jewish community in London from July 1, 1915 seen through the eyes and art of principally émigré artists, predominantly Jewish. First, they were forced to flee from the Russian Pale and East Europe and then, 50 years later, from Nazi-occupied Central Europe to Britain. Ben Uri and literally millions of people who bore witness to its many guises over the century have been part of a most extraordinary story.

Ben Uri Museum is the oldest cultural institution of the community. It was founded by a Russian émigré, artist Lazar Berson, who arrived in London from Paris in 1914. He was charismatic and persuaded artisans and small businessmen of the need for a Jewish art society.

The artistic establishment led by the Royal Academy, had no great interest in foreigners who looked and sounded different and wanted to paint portraits and landscapes in shapes and colour rather than photo type realism. So Berson and a group of community visionaries founded Ben Ouri, as it was known at the time.

If you think such an initiative was incredible given the chaos and poverty of the period, then try to imagine all this was going on in the midst of the Great War when Whitechapel had its fair share of Jewish men fighting and dying for King and country. Then you start to understand the extraordinarily ambitious spirit that has dominated so much of Ben Uri's 100 years.