Arthur Szyk

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Arthur Szyk was born in Lodz, Poland in 1894 and died in New Canaan, Connecticut, USA, an American citizen, in 1951. He worked as an illustrator, illuminator, and cartoonist. Szyk is best known for his illustrated and illuminated Haggadah. After the rise of Hitler, Arthur’s political activism led him to produce popular anti-fascist cartoons. He considered himself a ‘soldier in art’.
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Arthur Szyk was born in Lodz, Poland in 1894 and died in New Canaan, Connecticut, USA, an American citizen, in 1951. He worked as an illustrator, illuminator, and cartoonist. Szyk is best known for his illustrated and illuminated Haggadah. After the rise of Hitler, Arthur’s political activism led him to produce popular anti-fascist cartoons. He considered himself a ‘soldier in art’.  
 
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==Background==
 
==Background==
Born to a well-off Jewish family, Arthur Szyk parents sent the talented teenager, aged 15, to Paris to study art at the prestigious Academy Julian. In Paris he not only studied illustration but also the almost lost art of manuscript illumination. Szyk’s cartoons for a Polish satirical magazine began a life-long devotion to political activism as well as art. In 1913 Szyk continued his artistic studies in Poland, and spent most of World War 1 illustrating and painting. By 1919 Arthur Szyk’s artistic reputation enabled him to be the Director of Propaganda for the Polish army in Lodz.
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Born to a well-off Jewish family, Arthur Szyk parents sent the talented teenager, aged 15, to Paris to study art at the prestigious Academy Julian. While in Paris he not only learnt illustration but also the almost lost art of manuscript illumination. Szyk’s cartoons for a Polish satirical magazine began a life-long devotion to political activism as well as art. In 1913 Szyk continued his artistic studies in Poland, and spent most of World War 1 illustrating and painting. By 1919 Arthur Szyk’s artistic reputation enabled him to be the Director of Propaganda for the Polish army in Lodz.
  
 
==Paris==
 
==Paris==
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==Zionism==
 
==Zionism==
 
Szyk, an avid Zionist, was a follower and friend of ''Jabotinsky'' and a member of the ''Irgun'' organization.  Throughout the war Szyk produced a variety of Jewish themed cartoons showing the threat European Jews were under and calling for their rescue. One notable one, published in 1943 - ‘''We’re running out of Jews''’ - depicted Hitler looking at a document stating ''‘2 million Jews executed’''.
 
Szyk, an avid Zionist, was a follower and friend of ''Jabotinsky'' and a member of the ''Irgun'' organization.  Throughout the war Szyk produced a variety of Jewish themed cartoons showing the threat European Jews were under and calling for their rescue. One notable one, published in 1943 - ‘''We’re running out of Jews''’ - depicted Hitler looking at a document stating ''‘2 million Jews executed’''.
After the World War II he went back to book illustration and illuminating manuscripts. At the same time Arthur Szyk continued to support the Zionist cause with pictures of the ‘New Jew’ fighting for the land. After the founding of the State of Israel, Szyk produced an illuminated manuscript of the ''Proclamation of the State of Israel'', as well as illustrating stamps and other ephemera for the new State.
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After the World War II he went back to book illustration and illuminating manuscripts. At the same time Szyk continued to support the Zionist cause with pictures of the ‘New Jew’ fighting for the land. After the founding of the State of Israel, Szyk produced an illuminated manuscript of the ''Proclamation of the State of Israel'', as well as illustrating stamps and other ephemera for the new State.
  
 
==Legacy==
 
==Legacy==

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