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Józef Sandel

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Józef Sandel (Yiddish: יוסף סאנדעל; German: Josef Sandel; 29 September 1894, Kolomea – 1 December 1962, Warsaw)[1] was a Polish art historian and critic, an art dealer and collector, and an advocate on behalf of Jewish artists in postwar Poland.

Biography

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Sandel was born in Kolomea (Kolomyia, Ukraine), then in Galicia, in the Austro-Hungarian Empire. The son of a cap maker, he attended the Baron Hirsch school and then gymnasium.[1]

Around 1920, he moved to Dresden, Germany, where, in 1925, he co-published a short-lived German-language literary and art magazine, Mob: Zeitschrift der Jungen (Mob: Journal of youths).[1][2] He subsequently lived in France, Switzerland, and Austria, before returning to Dresden.[1]

From 1929 to 1933, he operated an art gallery in Dresden, called Galerie junge Kunst (Gallery of young art).[3] After the rise of the National Socialist regime in Germany, he moved to Belgrade (then in Yugoslavia), where he opened another gallery and mounted exhibitions, in 1933-1934.[1]

In 1935, he moved to Poland; he spent time in Vilna (Vilnius) and Warsaw, and published articles on art in Yiddish-language periodicals, including Literarishe Bleter [he].[1][4] At the outbreak of the Second World War he fled to the Soviet Union, and survived the war in Kazakhstan, where he taught German in a middle school.[1]

After the war, he returned to Poland and settled in Warsaw, in 1946.[5] There he became the leader of the Jewish Society for the Promotion of Fine Arts [pl]; Yiddish: Yidishe gezelshaft tsu farshpreytn kunst), or ZTKSP, a revival of an organization that had been active in Poland before the war.[6] The Society provided material assistance to Jewish artists, helped to promote their work, and fostered art education for Jewish youth.[7] It mounted some 98 exhibitions in Warsaw, and four exhibitions that were presented throughout Poland – two devoted to the work of individual artists, Rafael Mandelzweig, in 1946, and Lea Grundig, in 1949; and two, in 1948, in honor of the fifth anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, featuring works of Jewish artists who were killed in the Holocaust.[8]

After the dissolution of the ZTKSP, in September 1949, the art works that Sandel and his colleagues had assembled were integrated into the collections of the Jewish Historical Institute, Warsaw.[9] From 1950 to 1953 the institute operated a Gallery of Jewish Art, with Sandel serving as director.[10]

Sandel subsequently devoted himself to the writing of several art historical works concerning Jewish artists in Poland. Among his works, all written in Yiddish, is a two-volume biographical reference work on Jewish artists who perished during the Holocaust in Poland, Umgekumene yidishe kinstler in Poylen (Jewish artists in Poland who perished, Warsaw, 1957).[1]

Personal life

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Sandel married Ernestyna Podhorizer (1903-1984), who was also originally from Galicia and worked for a time as the secretary of the ZTKSP. Sandel-Podhorizer was born in Dembits (Dębica), and before the war had been a biology teacher in Lemberg (Lviv); she was later a curator at the museum of the Jewish Historical Institute, and also worked at the Biology Institute in Warsaw.[11]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Elis, Binyamin (1965). "Sandel, Yosef." Leksikon fun der nayer yiddisher literatur. New York: Congress for Jewish Culture. vol. 6, columns 300-301.
  2. ^ Dietzel, Thomas, and Hans-Otto Hügel (1988). "Mob." Deutsche literarische Zeitschriften, 1880-1945: Ein Repertorium. Munich: Saur. vol. 3, p. 807.
  3. ^ Piątkowska, Renata (2008). "Jewish Society for the Encouragement of Fine Arts / Di yidishe gezelshaft tsu farshpreytn kunst: An Attempt at the Continuation of Jewish Artistic Life in Postwar Poland, 1946-1949." In: Elvira Grözinger and Magdalena Ruta (Eds.), Under the Red Banner: Yiddish Culture in the Communist Countries in the Postwar Era. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 77-96; here p. 78-79.
  4. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 78.
  5. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 79.
  6. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 77-78.
  7. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 79-83.
  8. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 77, 83.
  9. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 84-85.
  10. ^ Piątkowska (2008), p. 85.
  11. ^ Elis, Binyamin (1965). "Sandel-Podhorizer, Erna (Ester)." Leksikon fun der nayer yiddisher literatur. New York: Congress for Jewish Culture. vol. 6, columns 301-302.
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