This is a revised version of an article I originally published in the Jewish Press
Rabbinic portraits have been treasured by generations of Jews, for some, as a way to remember someone they revered, for others, to be kept as amulets, or as a method to popularize his teachings. The Rabbis in the portraits themselves though, often objected to having their image taken and some took great lengths to prevent their dissemination. In some instances, the portraits were a method used by a publisher to promote the sales of the Rabbi's published work, at times reverting to creating an artist's rendition if no authentic portraits were available. Below is a look in to some portraits of famous Rabbis and their origins.
Rabbi Raphael Hakohen of Hamburg 1722-1803
Portrait of R. Raphael Cohen from Chronik von Berlin
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Rabbi
Raphael ben Jekuthiel Susskind Cohen, was Chief Rabbi of the Jewish
Communities of Altona-Hamburg-Wandsbek from 1775. During his lifetime,
in 1789, a German newspaper, Chronik von Berlin published his portrait.
Portrait of R. Raphael Cohen from Ivah Lemoshav
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In
a book titled Ivah Lemoshav, first published in 1903, a very different
portrait of his appears, alongside of a biography of his.
R. Aryeh Leib Ginsburg, the Sha'agat Aryeh (ca. 1695-1785)
There
is one known portrait of the Sha'agat Aryeh, portraying him laying down
with his eyes closed, it is uncertain if the portrait was made shortly
before or shortly after his death. The portrait appears in Nathan
Netter's Vingt Siècles d'Histoire d'une Communauté juive published in
1938, where the author writes how the image was obtained. Rabbi Yoel
Leib Herzog, the father of Chief Rabbi Isaac Herzog, served as Rabbi in
Paris, where he met Louis Bloch, who was a sixth generation descendant
of the Sha'agat Aryeh. Rabbi Herzog asked him if the family had any
portrait of him, and to his surprise he was informed by Bloch that his
sister owned an oil painting of the Shaagas Aryeh, executed while he lay
on his deathbed! Rabbi Herzog paid to have a reproduction made, and
this is the one that we have today.
R. David Oppenheim, Chief Rabbi of Prague (1664-1736)
A
print published in the late 1700s, popularized the portrait of the
Chief Rabbi of Prague, R. David Oppenheim. The portrait is an engraving
by the Bohemian engraver Johann Balzer, who based it on an original
by Johann Kleinhard (1738-1799), a premier artist in Prague. The
portrait depicts Oppenheim looking through a stone window, with a torch
over his shoulder.
Menasseh Ben Israel (1604-1657)
Portrait of Menasseh Ben Israel by Salom Italia
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R.
Menasseh ben Israel was a Rabbi, Kabbalist, writer, diplomat, printer
and publisher in Amsterdam. His portrait was made by noted artist Salom
Italia in 1642, and subsequently appeared as a frontispiece to printed
works authored by R. Menasseh Ben Israel, including in the 1652 printing
of his Nishmat Hayyim. For centuries, many believed that a portrait of a
Rabbi drawn by Rembrandt depicted Menasseh Ben Israel.
portrait by Rembrandt, thought to be of Menasseh Ben Israel
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Though
they both lived in Amsterdam in the same period, and may have known
each other, scholars believe that the portrait is not of Menasseh
Ben-Israel, despite the similarities.
Rabbi Shlomo Yehuda Leib Rapoport, known as Shir (1790-1867)
Rabbi
Shlomo Yehuda Leib Rapoport, often refereed to by his acronym Shir, was
the son in-law of Aryeh Leib HaCohen Heller, author of Ketzot Hachoshen
and Avne Miluim. Shir served as Chief Rabbi of Prague from 1840 and
his portrait is the work of Anotnín Machek (1775–1844), the leading
Czech portrait painter of the first half of the 19th century. The
portrait is now owned by the Jewish Museum, Prague.
Rabbi Yeshaya Steiner of Kerestir (1851 – 1925)
Rabbi
Yeshaya Steiner was the founder of the Kerestirer Hasidic dynasty and
served as Rabbi of the town of Kerestir. Reb Yeshayahle gained fame in
his lifetime as a miracle worker and an exceedingly generous man who
brought himself into debt to be able to support the needy. In the years
since his passing, Reb Yeshayahle 's portrait has come to be attributed
with the ability to ward off mice, and is commonly used in certain
circles by affixing to a wall in an infested area. There are conflicting
stories as to the origin of this belief, the more accepted version is
the following: One of his disciples Shloime Engel had a mice infestation
in his food warehouse. Consulting with R. Yeshayahle, The Rabbi quoted
the Talmud noting that mice came as a punishment to those who did not
tithe properly. When R. Yeshaya confirmed that indeed the tithe was
being given properly, he formed a Bet Din and decreed that the mice had
no case against Shloime Engel and committed his ruling to writing. The
written ruling was affixed to the walls of his warehouse, putting an end
to the infestation.
R. Chaim Yosef David Azulai - The Chida (1724-1806)
The
familiar portraits of the Chida we have today appear to be based on one
singular painting of the Chida, drawn by an Italian artist in the late
18th century. The painting, a miniature, which is in full color was
brought to Israel in 1960, alongside the body of the Chida, when it was
brought for reburial in Har Hamenuchot in Jerusalem.
R. Shabbatai HaKohen, the Shach (1621-1662) and the Magen Avraham, R. Abraham Abele Gombiner (1633-1683)
The Magen Avraham |
The Shach |
In
the early 1900s, the Viennese artist Meir Kunstadt worked for the
publishing house of Shlesinger-Sinai, which eventually made it's way to
Tel Aviv. Kunstadt is credited with popularizing many of the Rabbinic
portraits we have today, by creating illustrations for postcards, books
and sukkah posters. Though they were intended as artist's renditions and
not intended as authentic portraits, the portraits origins are at times
forgotten and have been mistaken for the likeness of the Rabbis
portrayed. One of Kunstadt's most popular drawings, was his series of
postcards of famous Rabbis, including that of the Magen Avraham and the
Shach, which have since been republished and today can be found in
numerous variations.
R. Menahem Azariah da Fano, the Rema MiPano (1548-1620)
The
Rema Mipano was an Italian Rabbi, Kabbalist and author of many sefarim.
The one portrait that exists of him, was popularized in an article by
David Kaufmann in Revue des études juives 1899. The portrait he printed
is said to have come from Mantua, Italy and shows the Rema Mipano with a
clean-cut beard, a subject which led to much to discussion. R. Shabbtai
Baer in his sefer Be'er Esek published in Venice in 1674, writes that
every Friday, the Rema MiPano would trim or shave his beard as was
common in Italy at the time. R. Baer inferred from this custom, that
Kabbalist teachings allow for the shaving of beards, a conclusion that
was challenged shortly after. R. Yosef Ergas took R. Baer to task in
Divre Yosef (Siman 25) published in 1742 and writes that the Rema MiPano
did not shave his beard and bases his conclusion on a different
portrait which he had seen.
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