Max Weber's Jewish-themed works of the 1940s were painted with an awareness of the morbid conditions facing European Jews during the Holocaust. The heavily outlined figures, depicted with an emotional energy, although in cool, monochromatic tonalities that add to the contemplative, yet grave mood of the picture, inhabit an ascetic and timeless interior. The painting functions as an elegy to Jewish tradition and the vulnerable bonds of continuity with the past.
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