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  • Seller image for Visages du ghetto. 14 gravures de Paul Jeffay. Préface de Jean Cassou. First edition. for sale by Wittenborn Art Books

    £ 463.44

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    Condition: Good. Folio. 29 x 39cm. Sheets loose as issued iin original printed wrappers and board slipcase. One of 175 numbered copies; Engraved bookplate of Guy de Rothschild.OCLC Number / Unique Identifier:173028078.Ben Uri Collection text: The painter-engraver Paul Jeffay (ne Saul Yaffie) was born in Glasgow, Scotland on 29 April 1898 to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents fleeing pogroms, who had been among the first generation of 20th century Jews to settle in the Gorbals, which became the heart of the Glasgow Jewish community. He studied at The Glasgow School of Art between 1912 and 1919 (one of only three other Jewish students at that time), winning numerous prizes. His tutors included the Estonian-born sculptor Benno Schotz, who recalled that upon the outbreak of the First World War, Yaffie won a poster competition for display in Glasgow tramcars depicting a woman and child fleeing from a fire. Jeffay's studies were interrupted by his voluntary war service (1916-17), and after briefly being stationed in the same Jewish battalion as sculptor Jacob Epstein, he served in the King's Own Scottish Borderers.Following the Armistice, Saul returned briefly to Glasgow, before moving to Paris and settling in Montmartre around 1919. He participated in various 'Salon des Independants' exhibitions in the 1920s and 1930s, adopting the pseudonym 'Paul Jeffay', and also working under the names Paul Lebeau, and Solomon/Saül Yaffie/Yafie. In 1930, he founded his own studio in 'Fontenay-aux-Roses', where he remained (with the exception of the Second World War years) until his death in 1957. Between 1933 and 1939, Jeffay made three prolonged visits to Poland, studying and sketching the Jewish community in the Warsaw Ghetto; the resulting album, 'Visages du Ghetto', comprises a series of fourteen etchings. Jeffay's studio was looted by the German Army during the Second World War and only a small portion of his work has survived.Paul Jeffay died in Paris, France in 1957. A set of the engravings from the 'Visages du Ghetto' series was shown, along with the original drawings at an exhibition organised by Ben Uri at at the Western Marble Arch Synagogue in 1994, entitled 'Visages du Ghetto: Paintings, Drawings and Etchings of Pre-War Jewish Europe by Paul Jeffay (1898-1957)' and a set of prints was afterwards gifted to the Ben Uri Collection by the artist's grandson.

  • Seller image for Rue St Médard for sale by Harrison-Hiett Rare Books

    JEFFAY, Paul.

    Published by Paris NP C1930, 1930

    Seller: Harrison-Hiett Rare Books, Richelieu, France

    Association Member: ABA ILAB NVVA

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    First Edition Signed

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    First edition / limited edition. An attractive engraving showing a brocante in a mid nineteenth century street scene. The engraving is done in a style that Jeffay often used, with the main image above, and a small panel below showing some of the characters involved in the scene. The print is signed in pencil to the bottom right, and is numbered 26/100. This is one of Jeffay's smaller limitations, as he usually seemed to produce works in limitations of 150 or 200. To the bottom edge of the sheet is written (probably in Jeffay's hand) Paris, Le Rue St Médard. A lovely clean copy on cream art paper. The image is 25cm x 17cm. The sheet is 50.5cm x 33.5cm. The sheet has been loosely laid under a passe partout (not stuck in). The verso of the sheet is blank and mainly clean, but with a couple of areas of tape residue (not visible from the front). Paul Jeffay (1898-1957), originally named Saul Yaffie, was a Scottish Jewish artist born in Glasgow to Russian-Jewish immigrant parents. He studied at the Glasgow School of Art and later moved to Paris, where he worked mainly as a painter and engraver under the pseudonym Paul Jeffay. Jeffay is known for his works depicting Jewish life, including etchings of the Warsaw Ghetto Jewish community created during visits to Poland in the 1930s. His studio in France was looted during World War II, and much of his work has been lost. He died in Paris in 1957. His art encompasses charming French street scenes as well as Judaica and Jewish scenes from ghettos, showing influence from early Bezalel School artists. .