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20150521Tel-Aviv, Beit Hatfutsot (Museum of Jewish People), 2015. First and only edition. This is a catalogue of an exposition of paintings and artworks by Eliahou Eric Bokobza, with explanatory texts in English. In-4, 308 x 250 mm, 141 (3) pp. Bradel-style hardcover with colorful boards. Title written in Hebrew on spine. Printed on couché paper. Foreword by Orit Shaham-Gover, text "Kol Israel Haverim (All Jews are Friends): Multiple Jewish Identities in the Work of Eric Bokobza" by Smadar Sheffi. "Bokobza grapples with the weighty concept of kol Yisrael haverim and the contrasting elements of what he calls his “mixed identity”—his Tunisian-French-Israeli heritage, Oriental and Occidental cultures, his experience with religion and mysticism as a secular Jew— in “United Colors.” The exhibit is modeled after traditional museum exhibitions of Judaica, said Bokobza, which typically divide Jewish ritual objects into Jewish holiday and life cycle sections... “In each painting, I’m showing what my secular experience as a Jew in Israel was like” he said." (The Times of Israel, "The artist whose life began with Elijah", Zahava Presser, 30 July 2015)
1922546London, Constable & company, 1922. First edition, second impression. In-8 hardcover, 13.5 x 21.5 cm, (xix) 308 pp. Bound in full crimson cloth, book title and author's name on the spine. Ex-library, trace of a removed label on the bottom of the spine, library stamp on the title page and right after. Preface and Contents at the beginning of the book. First published by Hilaire Belloc in 1922, "The Jews" is a controversial work of political and social analysis that addresses the complex and often antagonistic relationship between Jewish communities and their "host" European nations. Belloc argues that this friction is an inherent "Jewish problem," stemming from the Jewish people's status as a distinct, unassimilable nation within other societies. However, Belloc is keen to show tactfulness throughout the book and attacks "anti-Semites" as "extravagant" and "ill-balanced."
1931223BBZürich, Leipzig, Orell Füssli Verlag, 1931. 8°. 8 S., (english), 7 S. (hebrew). Mit 65 Abb. nach Photos von M. Vorobeichic. Illustr. Orig.-Halbleinenband (berieben und bestossen). = "Schaubücher", Bd. 27.
20050407Tel-Aviv, Ifat Reiss / GINA, 2005. This is the catalogue of an exhibition which happened from May 26 to June 25, 2005, at the GINA Gallery in Tel-Aviv, Israel. Bilingual, written in English and Hebrew. A square 22 cm softcover volume with Bradel-style covers and 65 pp. Printed on couché paper, features all the paintings exhibited at the event. Introduction by Jacques Ardies. Foreword by Dan Chill, founder of GINA. Translated by Ofer Halevi. Artists featured: Ivonaldo (Veloso de Melo), Louis Marius Amorim Ferreira de Moraes, Constancia Nery, Edgar Calhado, Malu Delibo, Edivaldo Barbosa de Souza, Barbara Rochlitz, Ana Maria Dias.
19900485Porto Alegre, Gráfica Editora Pallotti, no date [circa 1990]. First and only edition. Bilingual text, English and Portuguese. SIGNED by author on free endpaper: "Para Jayme Albek, o abraço do MOACYR. Maio, 1991" (For Jayme Albek, with a hug from Moacyr, May 1991) An oblong hardcover book of 297 x 217 mm and 120 pp. Widely illustrated with archive black & white photos, along with a few colored maps and drawings. Co-edited by the Instituto Judaico Marc Chagall, with a foreword of the president of the Institute Evelyn Berg. The book recalls the difficult arrival and settlement of Eastern European Jews, by the beginning and middle of the twentieth century, in the most southern state of Brazil. The author, Moacyr Jaime Scliar (1937-2011), spent most of his life in Porto Alegre. He worked as a physician and university professor while also constantly researching and churning literature: short stories, novels, essays, children's literature and some columns in several Brazilian newspapers. ********************************************** Porto Alegre, Gráfica Editora Pallotti, sem data [circa 1990]. Primeira e única edição. Texto bilíngue inglês e português. ASSINADO pelo autor em folha de guarda livre: "Para Jayme Albek, o abraço do MOACYR. Maio, 1991" Livro oblongo de capa dura, 297 x 217 mm, 120 páginas. Amplamente ilustrado com fotos em preto e branco de arquivo, além de alguns mapas e desenhos coloridos. Coeditado pelo Instituto Judaico Marc Chagall, com prefácio da presidente do Instituto, Evelyn Berg. O livro conta a difícil chegada e fixação de judeus do Leste Europeu, no início e meados do século XX, no estado mais ao sul do Brasil. O autor, Moacyr Jaime Scliar (1937-2011), passou a maior parte de sua vida em Porto Alegre. Trabalhou como médico e professor universitário, além de pesquisar e produzir constantemente literatura: contos, romances, ensaios, literatura infantil e algumas colunas em diversos jornais brasileiros.
196190136-Tel-Aviv, D. Topel and Sons, Modern Library, 1961, 162 p, 11,5x 16,5 cm, couverture illustrée. Dédicacé en anglais par l'auteur à Jacqueline.