The Twelve Tribes, 1962
Lithograph
Unsigned
Paper size: 92 x 151cm
£4950 Framed - SOLD -check availability with the gallery
A set of twelve original lithographs, designed in 1962 as designs for the Jerusalem windows. Printed in Paris by the renowned Atelier Mourlot, some of which are in twenty colours. The designs of the windows are: Judah, Levi, Simeon, Reuben, Zebulun, Benjamin, Isaachar, Joseph, Dan, Gad, Asher and and Nephtali. The Twelve Tribes lithographs after Chagall were based on preliminary sketches for the Jerusalem stained-glass windows. In 1959 Chagall was commissioned to design twelve stained glass windows for the new synagogue of the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Centre in Jerusalem. The number twelve is considered spiritual and sacred. These magnificent windows symbolise the twelve sons of Jacob from whom sprang the twelve tribes of Israel.
Keen that his designs be more widely disseminated, Chagall was closely involved with the production of the set of lithographs created by the world famous Mourlot. The publisher, James Parton, recalled how the artist stood beside the lithographer to watch the single sheets pass through the hand-fed stone press, one colour at a time, to catch every nuance of shading. He threw out the whole first set of gravure plates: the yellow, he felt, was off a shade.
Lithograph
Unsigned
Paper size: 92 x 151cm
£4950 Framed - SOLD -check availability with the gallery
A set of twelve original lithographs, designed in 1962 as designs for the Jerusalem windows. Printed in Paris by the renowned Atelier Mourlot, some of which are in twenty colours. The designs of the windows are: Judah, Levi, Simeon, Reuben, Zebulun, Benjamin, Isaachar, Joseph, Dan, Gad, Asher and and Nephtali. The Twelve Tribes lithographs after Chagall were based on preliminary sketches for the Jerusalem stained-glass windows. In 1959 Chagall was commissioned to design twelve stained glass windows for the new synagogue of the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Centre in Jerusalem. The number twelve is considered spiritual and sacred. These magnificent windows symbolise the twelve sons of Jacob from whom sprang the twelve tribes of Israel.
Keen that his designs be more widely disseminated, Chagall was closely involved with the production of the set of lithographs created by the world famous Mourlot. The publisher, James Parton, recalled how the artist stood beside the lithographer to watch the single sheets pass through the hand-fed stone press, one colour at a time, to catch every nuance of shading. He threw out the whole first set of gravure plates: the yellow, he felt, was off a shade.
Lithograph
Unsigned
Paper size: 92 x 151cm
£4950 Framed - SOLD -check availability with the gallery
A set of twelve original lithographs, designed in 1962 as designs for the Jerusalem windows. Printed in Paris by the renowned Atelier Mourlot, some of which are in twenty colours. The designs of the windows are: Judah, Levi, Simeon, Reuben, Zebulun, Benjamin, Isaachar, Joseph, Dan, Gad, Asher and and Nephtali. The Twelve Tribes lithographs after Chagall were based on preliminary sketches for the Jerusalem stained-glass windows. In 1959 Chagall was commissioned to design twelve stained glass windows for the new synagogue of the Hadassah-Hebrew University Medical Centre in Jerusalem. The number twelve is considered spiritual and sacred. These magnificent windows symbolise the twelve sons of Jacob from whom sprang the twelve tribes of Israel.
Keen that his designs be more widely disseminated, Chagall was closely involved with the production of the set of lithographs created by the world famous Mourlot. The publisher, James Parton, recalled how the artist stood beside the lithographer to watch the single sheets pass through the hand-fed stone press, one colour at a time, to catch every nuance of shading. He threw out the whole first set of gravure plates: the yellow, he felt, was off a shade.