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[Jerusalem]
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At the Gates of Jerusalem
Triptych (from right to left): Rock, Ladders, Sign
At the Gates of Jerusalem
Triptych (from right to left): Rock, Ladders, Sign
Mordecai Ardon sought to create a new Israeli artistic language that was both figurative-realistic and abstract-symbolic. In At the Gates of Jerusalem he used mystical imagery and ...
Jerusalem Men's College.
Jerusalem Men's College.
A group photo of the teachers and students at Jerusalem Men's College, an academic institution that operated in Jerusalem under the auspices of the Anglican Missionary Society. The...
Map of the Holy Land
Map of the Holy Land
From: La Mer Des Hystoires, Pierre Le Rouge for Vincent Commin, Paris, 1488. French translation of Rudimentum Novitorum, Published in 1475 by Lucas Brandis de Schass
This rare woo...
Fragment of mosaic with wave pattern
Fragment of mosaic with wave pattern
Irregularly shaped mosaic fragment consisting of small white tesserae. A pattern of parallel and repeating waves runs the length of the panel in black tesserae (1).
1. AIEMA no....
An Allegorical Wedding: Sketch for a carpet dedicated to Mr. and Mrs. David Wolffsohn
Triptych (from right to left): Exile, Marriage, Redemption
An Allegorical Wedding: Sketch for a carpet dedicated to Mr. and Mrs. David Wolffsohn
Triptych (from right to left): Exile, Marriage, Redemption
This triptych was created by one of the founders of the Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts in Jerusalem: the graphic artist Ephraim Moses Lilien, who is regarded as the leading form...
Jerusalem: The Duke of Connaught on his way to the Holy Sepulchre.
Jerusalem: The Duke of Connaught on his way to the Holy Sepulchre.
A postcard with ballet prints from a photograph documenting the visit of Prince Arthur, son of Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, to the Old City of Jerusalem, shortl...
Study, Reduced to about One Quarter, of Tintoret's Sketch of "The Entry into Jerusalem," in the Uffizi Gallery at Florence
Study, Reduced to about One Quarter, of Tintoret's Sketch of "The Entry into Jerusalem," in the Uffizi Gallery at Florence
This is copied from a section of Tintoretto's "Entry into Jerusalem," c. 1546, originally from the Palazzo Medici Riccardi, on deposit at the Uffizi....

