Portrait of Theodore Herzl , n.d.
91 x 55.5 cm (h x w)
Oil on canvas

This portrait shows the Zionist leader Theodor Herzl dressed as a European intellectual, but his posture and surroundings are reminiscent of biblical depictions of Moses. In this way the artist associates a thoroughly modern personality with tradition and vision underlining his qualities as a leader. Theodor(e) Herzl became famous for his publication ‘Der Judenstaat’ (‘The Jewish State’) in 1895. He was not the first to suggest that Jews form their own state, however it was his idea of a return to Palestine that eventually led to the foundation of Israel. Pilichowski is best known for his depictions of Jewish life, religious representations and many scenes of Jewish suffering, but he also painted landscape and portraiture. In his time, some people criticised the artist for the sobriety, with which he had depicted the political leader, although from 1908 Pilichowski was an active Zionist and this is probably his most famous portrait (another version is in the Central Zionist Archive in Jerusalem).

The Ben Uri Album (1916) with illustrations by founder Lazar Berson includes a plate depicting a monument to Herzl.

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Ben Uri Research Unit

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