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This work is one of a series of five oil paintings on canvas on Old Testament subjects that together explore issues of faith, sacrifice, courage, love, and redemption, originally commissioned directly from the artist by Czechoslovakian-born Rabbi Hugo Gryn, a Holocaust survivor, for the Stern Hall of the West London Synagogue in 1973. The scene is from the biblical Book of Ruth in which Ruth and Orpah, two women of Moab, had married the two sons of Elimelech and Naomi, Judeans who had settled in Moab to escape a famine in Judah. After the death of Elimelech, and then the husbands of both younger women, Naomi plans to return to her native Bethlehem and urges her daughters-in-law to return to their families and re-marry. Orpah reluctantly departs but Ruth begs to stay with Naomi and share her fate. They travel to Bethlehem and Ruth looks after Naomi by collecting the gleanings of the field belonging to a wealthy landowner named Boaz, whom she eventually marries, becoming great-grandmother to King David.

Ben Uri Gallery & Museum

London

Title

Naomi and Her Daughters-in-Law

Date

1973

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 365 x W 161 cm

Accession number

2013-f2

Acquisition method

acquired from West London Synagogue with the assistance of Miriam and Richard Borchard

Work type

Painting

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Ben Uri Gallery & Museum

108a Boundary Road, St John's Wood, London, Greater London NW8 0RH England

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