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The art that made Ukraine and the Jewish artists who made it

This weekend the UK’s biggest ever exhibition about modernist art in Ukraine opens at the Royal Academy

June 28, 2024 17:35
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Issakhar Ber Ryback, City Shtetl, 1917, oil on canvas, National Art Museum of Ukraine
5 min read

The modernist movement in Ukraine unfolded against a backdrop of collapsing empires, the First World War, the fight for independence and the eventual establishment of Soviet Ukraine. But despite this profound upheaval, groundbreaking modernist art was made in Ukraine between 1900 and the 1930s, and Jews played a key part its creation.

In what is Britain’s most comprehensive exhibition about modernist art in Ukraine to date, the Royal Academy’s In the Eye of the Storm, which opens on June 29, tells the story of a  group of modernist artists who helped define Ukraine’s cultural identity in their time.  Many of the groups  whose work is featured in the exhibition were inspired by the creative experiments taking place is European capitals such as Munich and Paris, where Cubism and Futurism were flourishing. The art section of the Kultur Lige, an organisation founded in 1918 that promoted the development of contemporary Jewish-Yiddish culture, was one of the groups. At the time, it also says curator Katia Denysova understood 1918 to mid 1920s as an optimistic “generative moment” when peaceful, creative coexistence between Ukraine’s communities seemed possible.

Manuil Shekhtman, Immigrants, 1926, tempera on canvas[Missing Credit]

However, this does not seem to be the message behind Immigrants painted by Manuil Shektman (1900-1941) in 1926. Originally entitled Jewish Pogrom the monumental canvas depicts a supine naked body in the lower foreground, elbows and knees angled defensively.  Above the body, filling the space between elbow and knee joints, a woman with a red shawl half on and half off her head, places a crumpled griege cloth across the body’s waist. Her pose mirrors the disarray of the figure she tends, her face at 45 degrees, the same greige as the proffered cloth, resting on her hand atop her bent knee. Framing her right, a thin hooded figure in patterned skirt, clings to the exposed knee of an old man, burrowing her head under his coat.

The seated old man holds one hand to his eye, between brown cap and long grey beard. On his other side, a woman in faded orange dress and headsquare looks blankly into space, one arm taking the weight of her head, the other lying limply across her lap. Two decorated scroll shafts lie on the ground. The body and four figures form a diamond shape. Behind them a circle of six figures in muted brown and blue shades, including a woman with her arm in a sling, sit in a circle, heads bowed. A folkloric landscape of rocks, foliage and trees fills the remaining plane. Tempera’s quick-drying properties add to the fading atmosphere.

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Art