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Opinion

Selling off much of the Ben Uri's collection fails the Jewish artists who set it up

Dr Roza I. M. El-Eini says there has been an 'obsessive drive' to strip the museum of its identity

December 6, 2018 14:00
The Ben Uri
2 min read

In recent years, changes by the Ben Uri have systematically removed the “Jewish” from it. In their obsessive drive to submerge this element of the Ben Uri and find a central London location, they have turned it into “The Art Museum for Everyone”, as the Tate, V&A, National Gallery, National Portrait Gallery and other behemoths are enviously eyed and lined up as the Ben Uri’s “opposition”.

The Board states that the émigre Ben Uri story is “universal”. This betrays the origins of the Ben Uri and its Jewish artists. It is not by chance that the Ben Uri bares its name. Bezalel Ben Uri was the master craftsman who created the Tabernacle and “was to engage in all kinds of crafts” (Exodus 31, 1–5).

Founded in the Jewish ghetto of Whitechapel in 1915, the “Jewish National Arts Association London Ben Ouri” had close ties with the Bezalel School in Jerusalem, established in 1906. 

Both organisations had chosen the name “as an inspiration for their mission to revive and promote Jewish art”, according to Ben Uri’s website.