Wednesday, July 16, 2008

My Article on Mayer Kirshenblatt's Poland Paintings

PAINTING A LOST WORLD IN POLAND




Published: 07/10/2008

Since learning to paint at 73, Mayer Kirshenblatt's mission for nearly two decades has been to record the vibrant lost world of his childhood in Poland.

Ruth Ellen Gruber

KRAKOW, Poland (JTA) -- When Mayer Kirshenblatt was born, the town of Opatow in south-central Poland was known to most of its inhabitants as "Apt." That's because most of the population was Jewish, and Apt was Opatow's name in Yiddish.

The Holocaust left Yiddish Apt a distant memory, glimpsed dimly in sepia-tinted photographs or locked up in the hearts of the few people still alive who had known it before the destruction.

Kirshenblatt was one of them until 1990 when, at the age of 73, he taught himself to paint and began to record in colorful detail the vibrant lost world of his childhood hometown.

"I only paint one thing -- that's Apt," he said. "I paint not from my imagination but what actually happened."

Sprightly and bespectacled, with twinkling eyes and a bristly moustache, Kirshenblatt turned to painting at the urging of his family.

Since 1967, his daughter, the scholar Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, has conducted interviews with him on prewar Jewish life in Apt.

The recollections were published last year along with nearly 200 of Kirshenblatt's paintings as a book, "They Called Me Mayer July." The title stems from Kirshenblatt's childhood nickname, "Mayer Tamez," or "Mayer July" -- slang at the time for "Crazy Mayer."

The book has won several awards and brought international attention to the work of Kirshenblatt, who left Poland for Canada in 1934.

In recent months Kirshenblatt's paintings have been exhibited in San Francisco, and in the coming two years they are slated to be shown in Atlanta, New York, Amsterdam and Warsaw. This summer, for the second year in a row, Kirshenblatt's work was featured at the annual Jewish Culture Festival in Krakow.

And on June 28, Kirshenblatt and his daughter brought his memories of Apt back to present-day Opatow with an exhibition of 50 full-scale digital prints of his paintings, on display at the Opatow District Office building.

"It was absolutely fabulous," Kirshenblatt later said. "We had over 200 people and they made a tremendous display. The event was well advertised all over the city with posters -- even the priest mentioned it."

He added, "I've had exhibitions elsewhere, but here the people, the atmosphere, was absolutely the best I ever had."

It was, Kirshenblatt said, a far cry from the first time that he returned to his hometown. That was in 1988, when Poland was still in the grip of communist rule. "I was crying," he recalled. "I came to the town and there was not a sign of Jewishness."

Since then, Kirshenblatt and his daughter have returned on other occasions and established good relations with Opatow's residents.

"I enjoy going back there, and Opatow is beautiful," he said. "But it's not Apt."

Displaying the energy of someone far younger than 91, Kirshenblatt and his daughter have toured extensively, accompanying slide shows of his paintings with lively discussions of the incidents and people portrayed.

"At my age," he said, "to have another career like this is most terrific."

Detailed, wry and often witty, Kirshenblatt's paintings are peopled by sometimes crudely drawn characters, each of which seems to come to life as an individual. They crowd around dinner tables or cluster in the synagogue. They peer into windows, carry water in wooden buckets, play music, walk to school, mourn the dead, even commit a crime.

To a certain extent, the paintings recall the work of the American Grandma Moses, another self-taught artist who took up the brush in her 70s and created remembered scenes of rural life in 19th-century America.

History, though, has given Kirshenblatt's work a special edge.

The titles of his paintings alone reflect complex, even convoluted tales that defy common stereotypes. Some examples: "The Kleptomaniac Slipping a Fish Down Her Bosom," "Boy with a Herring," "The Hunchback's Wedding," and "Jadzka the Prostitute Shows off her Wares at the end of Market Day at Harshl Kishke's Well."

"What I'm trying to say is, 'Hey! There was a big world out there before the Holocaust,' " Kirshenblatt told his daughter in one recent conversation. "There was a rich cultural life in Poland as I knew it at the time. That's why I feel I'm doing something very important by showing what that life was like."

"It's in my head," he said. "I will be gone, but the book will be here."

Opatow's official Web site offers scant mention of the town's Jewish past. Most of those who live there now settled in the town from elsewhere after World War II. Knowledge about the town's prewar past is sketchy.

Things are changing, though, says Kirshenblatt-Gimblett.

At the exhibition in Opatow, she said, she met a young local man who wants to specialize in Jewish studies in college. And as part of a nationwide project of "adopting" historic places, a group of local people is attempting to document the destroyed Jewish cemetery and recover uprooted tombstones.

The high profile accorded her father and his work, Kirshenblatt-Gimblett said, are part of this process.

"They have really embraced him," she said. "They consider him really one of the people who holds the memory of the town."

Significant, too, she said, was the title given by town authorities to her father's exhibition.

"They called it 'Old Opatow,' not 'Old Jewish Opatow,' " she said. "And when we dedicated the book, we dedicated it to the people of Apt. So it's everybody, Jews and non-Jews alike, but we dedicated it to the town with its Jewish name."

Monday, July 14, 2008

Lata (Waterfall) Iskandar at Cameron Highland

Iskandar Waterfall (N4°19.535' E101°19.446') is located between Cameron Highland and Tapah. (You will definitely pass by if you going to the Highland from Tapah)

On the day we left Cameron highland, we drop by this waterfall.....because attracted by are many stalls along the main road which are selling souvenirs. I bought a plant looks like a coconut that I don't know what the name of it. According to the locals, you can only get this at Cameron Highland. It will grow bigger but no flowers! And it still alive today! :) (I will snap the photo and post it later...)

As you can see the souvenir stalls along the road

During our visit to the waterfall, the area looks quite clean and well maintain. But I wonder the situation now?!
The water was ICE cold because it's situated almost about 1000 meter above sea level......


Related post :-
*
Cactus Valley, Brinchang - Cameron Highland
* Cameron Highland in 2003, Pahang

Waterfall at Johor :-
* Pulai Waterfall, Johor
* Sungai Bantang Waterfall at Bekok, Johor
* Batu Hampar Waterfall at Endau Rompin National Park, Johor
* Buaya Sangkut Waterfall at Endau Rompin National Park, Johor
* Upeh Guling Waterfall at Endau Rompin National Park, Johor

* Kota Tinggi Waterfall, Johor






MY TRIPS - Home

Little Penang at Taman Perling, Johor Bahru.

Kopitiam (coffee shop) Leong Seng Huat (N1°29.023' E103°40.835') located at Jalan Simbang, Tmn Perling, just next to Pizza Hut.

I describe this shop as Little Penang because the owner and others hawkers stall all are from Penang. You will have a chance to taste the original Penang foods like : Penang Hokkien Mee (as Prawn noodle at JB), Loh Mee, Penang Char Koay Tiaw and Penang Kuey Tiaw soup. I love to visit this shop because of this is the only shop (at the moment) selling Penang foods. They even use the Penang method to serve the coffee or tea......

I ordered the Char Koay Tiaw this time and I rated 4/5!! It's worth trying others hawker if you happen to be there. I rated all are the same - 4/5!

Previously they sell the Superb Penang Assam Laksa. Too bad they stop it because of their fish supply not consistant!
I love the Laksa very much! But too bad....it's become history today. I still cannot find the replacement until today!

p/s : I will update the GPS Coordinates in the future.




MY TRIPS - Home

Monday, July 7, 2008

Cactus Valley, Brinchang - Cameron Highland

We visited this big nice Cactus Valley (N4°29.674' E101°23.200') on the 2nd day of the trip (Sep, 2003). I cannot remember the entrance fees now......hmm, my poor memory!

Basically, it's full of choices of the Cactus and colourful too!





The Biggest Cactus in the valley!!


One of the visitor of this blog – Mr Kumar told that there's a Big Red Strawberry Farm and the back of this Valley. But you have to walk through Cactus Valley.....and it's FREE entrance! If you are happen to here the Cactus Valley, it's worth visit this Hi-tech farm few steps further up!


Related post :-
* Cameron Highland in 2003, Pahang
* Lata (Waterfall) Iskandar at Cameron Highland


MY TRIPS - Home

Thursday, July 3, 2008

Death of Prof. Bezalel Narkiss

See obituary of a pioneer in the study of Jewish art and culture

Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Sam's Blog

Here's a link to my brother Sam Gruber's blog on Jewish art and heritage

My New Column

Here's a link to my first of a planned monthly "Rootless Cosmopolitan" column for JTA.