The Wedding

Image credit: Ben Uri Collection

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John Henry Amshewitz began experimenting with etching in 1924 and completely abandoned the medium after 1935, having produced a total of twenty plates, Rembrandtesque in style and spirit, but also reflecting his sardonic sense of humour. ‘The Wedding’ is based on a Jewish myth that an unwed woman cannot enter Heaven. Amshewitz's widow described the scene in her memoirs: the bride is 'the ugly, masculine-looking, crippled woman lying on her death-bed. Her brother, in his anxiety for her celestial welfare, has bribed an old passer-by to marry her and, together with an aged witness, they are standing at the bedside. The rabbi, holding a goblet of wine, has performed part of the ceremony, but as the ring is being placed on her finger, she drops back.

Ben Uri Gallery & Museum

London

Title

The Wedding

Date

1925

Medium

etching on paper

Measurements

H 26 x W 26 cm

Accession number

1987-13

Acquisition method

presented by Mr and Mrs Sheldon, 1981

Work type

Print

Signature/marks description

Signed (lower right) 'J.H.Amshewitz'

Inscription description

Titled (lower left): The Wedding

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Ben Uri Gallery & Museum

108a Boundary Road, St John's Wood, London, Greater London NW8 0RH England

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