Jewish Art
Judaism is the religion and
culture of the Jewish people and it is also one of the oldest religious
traditions still practiced today. Judaism is the first recorded and one of the
three main monotheistic religions that arose in the Near East and dominated the
spiritual life of the Western world (Judaism, Christianity and Islam).
Jews believe that God made a covenant with their ancestors, the Hebrew, and
that they are God's chosen people. They await the coming of a savior - the
Messiah, "the anointed one." Christians believe that Jesus of Nazareth was that
Messiah. Muslims believe Muhammad to be God's (Allah's) last and greatest
prophet.
The tenets and history of Judaism constitute the historical foundation of
many other religions, including Christianity and Islam. From a cultural point of
view, Jewish contributions to mankind are enormous. Besides the concept of
monotheism, Jews contributed clear-cut standards of law - Ten Commandments.
Although these values are collectively understood as the Judeo-Christian ethic,
the scope of their influence extends far beyond Christians and Jews. Recognized
objects of Judaic art date back to the dawn of history, even before the "common
era." Only a few survived the attrition of time. Among them were beautifully
illustrated manuscripts, mosaics of Beth Alpha (Israel) and segments of
Duro-Europos (Syria), the ruins of an ancient synagogue.
The Jewish people trace their origin to the patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and
Jacob. His twelve sons founded the twelve tribes of Israel. They migrated to
Egypt, where they lived for several hundred years until harshly oppressed by one
of the pharaohs. In the 13th century BCE the prophet Moses led them out of
slavery in Egypt and back to the promised land of Canaan between the
Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River (later called Palestine). The Hebrew
Scriptures relate how, on their journey, God reaffirmed his special relationship
with the Israelites and gave Moses the Ten Commandments, the Tablets of the Law,
on Mount Sinai.
The Tablets of the Law were housed in the profoundly sacred Ark of the
Covenant, a gold-covered wooden box whose construction was prescribed in the
Hebrew Scriptures. The Israelites carried the ark with them on their desert
wanderings until they finally conquered Canaan and built a permanent temple in
Jerusalem in the 10th century BCE under King Solomon. The menorah and ark were
placed in the Temple. The Babylonians destroyed the First Temple in 586 BCE.
About seventy years later, a Second Temple of Jerusalem, smaller, was built and
later enlarged by Herod the Great, king of the region. It was destructed and
plundered by the Romans in 70CE what was so vividly described by the Jewish
chronicler Josephus.
The Jews had the Temple in Jerusalem with organized priesthood, but they also
gathered in buildings, later known as synagogues. Contrary to many other
religions, specialized architecture was less central in Judaism. Synagogue, with
a role as place of study, could be any large room. Early Jewish spiritual life
emphasized religious learning and an individual's direct relationship with God.
Following the destruction of Jerusalem, there no longer was an organized
priesthood and the role of synagogue expanded. They began to serve as places for
prayer for the dispersed community.
Judaism's rich ceremonial affirmation of Jewish history and belief inspired
the creation of scrolls, books and ritual objects. Because Jews were weak on
abstractions, Biblical verbiage was set in concrete terms, with numerous
personifications. Bezalel personified art. The name means "standing in the
shadow of God." According to Hebrew Scriptures - Exodus, God gave him the
intelligence, wisdom and skill "to create marvelous articles." Bezalel became an
architect, sculptor and designer of holy garments. He was the first Jewish
artist on record, known for making the Tabernacle that contained the Ark of the
Covenant, constructed by prescription in the Scriptures. The menorah, typical
ritual object kept with the Ark, has a form probably derived from the ancient
near Eastern Tree of Life, symbolizing both the end of exile and the paradise to
come. Torah scrolls, containing the Pentateuch, the first five books of the
Hebrew Scriptures (Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy), were
read publicly and kept in curtained shrines.
Jews were forbidden to make images that might be worshiped as idols, but this
prohibition against representational art was applied primarily to sculpture in
the round in early Judaism. Jewish art during the Roman Empire combined both
Near Eastern and classical Greek and Roman elements to depict Jewish subject
matter, both symbolic and narrative. Since Christianity arose out of Judaism,
its art incorporated many symbols and narrative representations drawn from the
Hebrew Scriptures and other Jewish sources. Almost no examples of specifically
Christian art exist before the early third century, and even then it continued
to draw its styles and imagery from Jewish and classical traditions. This
process is known as syncretism. Orant figures - worshipers with arms
outstretched - for example, can be pagan, Jewish, or Christian, depending on the
contest in which they occur. Perhaps the most important of these syncretic
images is the Good Shepherd. In pagan art, he was Hermes the shepherd or Orpheus
among the animals, but Jews and Christians saw him as the Good Shepherd of the
Twenty-third Psalm: "The Lord is my shepherd; there is nothing I lack".