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The beauty of Hebrew over three millennia of Jewish civilisation

Scribe and calligrapher Izzy Pludwinski has collated texts from the last 3,000 years to demonstrate the alphabet's artistry and mystical power

September 21, 2023 14:59
ONLINE letters JC2
6 min read

In 2005, Izzy Pludwinski was standing in front of a large panel of Japanese calligraphy at the National Museum in Tokyo. Beside him was an elderly Japanese man.

After admiring the panels for a while, the man began to gently trace the flow of strokes with his hands, humming as he did so.

In the preface to his new book, The Beauty of the Hebrew Letter: From Sacred Scrolls to Graffiti, Pludwinski recalls the scene, observing that “the vitality the calligrapher had put into the characters was now being embodied by this man”.

You could say the scribe and calligrapher Pludwinski is performing a similar service for the Hebrew letter. Collating texts from across continents and more than three millennia, he demonstrates not only the artistry of Hebrew calligraphy, the meaning and formation of the aleph-bet from biblical times to the present day, but also its mystical beauty.

He examines historical manuscripts and sacred scrolls, fine art and street art, the scripts found on sacred objects. He pores over traditional calligraphy and lettering, aleph-bets and individual letters, abstract and decorative calligraphy.

In the first section of the book, we get an overall picture of the migratory paths of the Jewish people showing how the basic structure of Hebrew remained constant while also absorbing stylistic flourishes of the Jews’ host cultures.

For example, the Florentine Rothschild Machzor from the 1490s features a lavish romantic Italian semi-cursive style that Pludwinski juxtaposes with the French Sefer Mitzvot Katan from a hundred years before. Here the script, stark and pointy, is rendered with the rigidity of gothic architecture.

The most remarkable example of this cultural diffusion comes in the cover of Yiddish poet Itzik Kipnis’s collection of poems, Oxen, designed by Mark Epshtein, in 1923.

Topics:

Hebrew

Art