1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
- Artwork Title
- Tefillin
- Series Title
- Zsido Unnepek
- Date
-
publication/distribution:
1940
- Classification
-
Art
- Category
-
Prints
- Object Type
-
Linocuts (tgm)
- Credit Line
- United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Collection, Gift of Ann Gabor Arancio
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
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Record last modified: 2020-06-30 09:43:34
This page: https://collections.ushmm.org/search/catalog/irn524998
Also in Imre Amos collection
The collection consists of a set of prints of linocuts, Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Holidays] created by Imre Amos, a Hungarian Jewish artist, and published during the Holocaust during which he perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
1 from a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.
Cover for a series of 14 wartime prints by a Hungarian Jewish artist honoring the Jewish holidays
Object
Print from an album of fourteen printed linocuts titled Zsido Unnepek [Jewish Feasts] created by Imre Amos (1907-1944), a Hungarian Jewish artist who perished in Ohrdruf concentration camp in Germany. This is one of 150 sets published in 1940. Amos was assigned several times to forced labor battalions from 1940-1944. Between assignments he returned home and continued to produce and exhibit his art, with his wife Margit Anna, a painter.