ELIZABETH'S BLOG
A Great-Granddaughter's Legacy

Chasing Portraits – A Book Blurb

Moshe Rynecki (1881-1943) was an artist who painted scenes of the Polish Jewish community in the interwar years. He had a keen eye for exploring and documenting the daily rhythm and life of synagogue, teaching, labor, and leisure. His work is made rarer and more precious by documenting the nuances of both a way of life and a place that were irrevocably destroyed by the crushing impacts of World War II and the Holocaust.

At the outbreak of the Second World War, Moshe became concerned about preserving his life’s work. In the early days of the war he made the decision to divide his oeuvre of approximately 800 works into a number of bundles, and to hide them in and around Warsaw. He gave a list of the locations where the works were hidden to his wife, son, and daughter, in hopes that after the war the family would retrieve the bundles and the collection would be [Read more…]

Keri Douglas on Art, People & News from Around the World

Keri Douglas is a writer, photographer and storyteller. She has worked as a writer at the White House; for the Director of Voice of America; and, as the first press secretary at the Swiss Embassy in Washington, D.C.   I’m honored to share that Keri has now also written a lovely blog post about the Moshe Rynecki project on her site, 9 Muses News.  Her piece, “Lost and Found: Moshe Rynecki, Illustrator of Polish Jewish Life,” is written with passion for the story and the art.  You can also follow Keri on Twitter: @keridouglas

More “Lost” Moshe Rynecki Paintings “Found”

Last year, I reconnected with a man in Canada whose parents had purchased a bundle of Moshe’s paintings from a Polish farmer shortly after the end of the war.  His parents had been partisans fighting the German army in Russia, and encountered the farmer while returning home.  He said his parents had given away many of the paintings from the original bundle to different friends and family.  As a result he didn’t know where all the pieces from the bundle were, but he had a few, and his aunt in Israel had several more. About a year ago, he sent four pictures of paintings in his possession, and just a week ago, I received an email with photographs of eight more paintings from his aunt.[Read more…]

A Lost Painting Found in an Old Polish Zionist Newspaper

Chanuka

Chanuka

WOW! So I have a story to tell. In April 2012 I learned of an article in Polish all about my great-grandfather. A friend in Finland had a friend in Poland who offered to read it (it was just too long for me to type into Google Translate) and to let me know if it said anything significant. It did. The footnotes mentioned a newspaper, a Polish-language Zionist daily published in Warsaw (1923-1939), titled: Nasz Przegląd (Our Review) and a special insert section called Ilustrowany (illustrated). [Read more…]

Children’s Books and the Holocaust

I have a soft spot for picture books – many of the best have few words, carefully chosen to keep the story simple and compelling.  Picture books are generally meant to be read aloud and to allow children to follow along by “reading” the pictures.  It’s a brilliant concept, but the proof is in the execution, which is particularly difficult with emotionally wrenching subject matter, such as a Holocaust story.  I’ve read many young adult oriented Holocaust novels, and while I haven’t found a work in that form yet that I really love, I am deeply impressed with two picture books aimed at younger children set in the middle of the history of the Holocaust.

I discovered Karen Hesse and Wendy Watson’s The Cats in Krasinski Square picture book completely by accident. I was at the public library with my sons (who were quite little at the time), and noticed a book left on the floor. Perhaps a child had pulled it out and dropped it, or maybe a parent perused it but thought the subject matter inappropriate for their child.  It was just happenstance that I noticed it—One of my favorite pieces painted by my great-grandfather is titled “Krasinski Park,” so the Krasinsky in the title caught my eye.[Read more…]

Two Books Written by Children of Holocaust Survivors that had an Enormous Impact on Me

My journey, as well as my relationship to the work of my great grandfather, has followed a complicated and winding path.  Perhaps it is best described as a journey of many steps.  I first became interested in the story after the death of my grandfather in 1992.  While the memoir he left in the trunk of his car kindled a strong interest in my father’s and grandparents’ stories of survival, I was put off by my father and grandmother’s reticence to talk about the War years and my fear that questions would inflict too much pain on their psyche.  In part because I was frustrated in my desire for more details, I developed a broader interest in understanding the impact of the Holocaust on the “Second Generation,” the children of survivors.  The book, Children of the Holocaust: Conversations with Sons and Daughters of Survivors by Helen Epstein had a large impact on me.  Epstein, the daughter of Holocaust survivors, whose “secret quest,” was to “find a group of people who, like me, were possessed by a history they had never lived.  I wanted to ask them questions, so that I could reach the most elusive part of myself” made a lot of sense to me and had a powerful impact on me.  I had never met other children of survivors and the idea that we might share a similar background and understanding of the Holocaust was compelling.[Read more…]

An article about the Moshe Rynecki project in the Jewish Advocate – A Boston based newspaper

Click Here to view this article on the JewishAdvocate.com

A brush with the Holocaust

Moshe Rynecki lives on through his paintings
By Alexandra Lapkin
Advocate Staff

Moshe Rynecki’s paintings are keeping his memory alive, thanks to the efforts of his great-granddaughter.
Elizabeth Rynecki grew up surrounded by her great-grandfather’s paintings.

Although she had never met him, she learned about him and his life through his artwork. The scenes Moshe Rynecki painted portray a world that no longer exists: Polish Jews from the 1920s and 1930s at work, praying together in shul, women taking care of their children, and families and neighbors coming together during hours of leisure.[Read more…]

Chasing Portraits: A great-granddaughter’s search for her lost art legacy

I’m speaking in Boston on Thursday June 13th 2013 about the Moshe Rynecki paintings and story. [Read more…]

A Window to the Past

This week I have a guest blog over on Jewish Art Education’s website. The piece, “Moshe Rynecki: A Window to the Past” is a short piece – about 500 words – about the Moshe Rynecki project, with an emphasis on looking to the works as an opportunity for educators to use the pieces to broach issues of Jewish history, religious studies, art history, ethnicity, identity, and the Holocaust.  I’ll share it here too:[Read more…]

Private Holdings – MRynecki paintings in Canada

In March 2008, we received a remarkable phone call.  A gentleman from Canada called to ask about our website and my grandfather’s memoir.  He said, “I read your book.  I think I have one of the paintings described in the book.”  He was referring to a description of a painting my grandfather wrote about in his memoir.  The passage from the book reads as follows:

My father was constantly painting.  When the Polish came to power he painted a painting, oil on canvas, which became a controversial one in Warsaw.  He created a Russian pogrom, an attack of the Cossacks on a [Read more…]