Das Bild zeigt einen Ausschnitt aus Moritz Daniel Oppenheims Selbstbildnis mit seiner ersten Frau Adelheid, geb. Cleve

Moritz Daniel Oppenheim

Scenes from Traditional Jewish Family Life

Moritz Daniel Oppenheim (1800 Hanau—1882 Frankfurt) was the first academically trained Jewish painter of modern times to work in Frankfurt. The range of his artistic oeuvre is impressive and includes religious, literary, and historical motifs as well as portraits. With his “Pictures from Old Jewish Family Life,” idealized genre scenes depicting Jewish holidays and customs, he became known well beyond Germany.

Many of his paintings can be interpreted as indirect commentaries on the emancipation of Jews in Germany in the nineteenth century. His own life and artistic career are also examples of the social rise of the Jewish bourgeoisie. In contrast to many other Jewish intellectuals of his generation, such as Heinrich Heine, Ludwig Börne, and Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy, Oppenheim refused to convert to Christianity and always stood by his Jewish roots.

[Translate to English:] Deckblatt zu Moritz Daniel Oppenheims "Bilder aus dem altjüdischen Familienleben", Frankfurt am Main, 1882.
[Translate to English:] Deckblatt zu Moritz Daniel Oppenheims "Bilder aus dem altjüdischen Familienleben", Frankfurt am Main, 1882.

Oppenheim’s famous “Scenes from Old Jewish Family Life” portray Jewish rituals and the major stages of life in the form of genre scenes. But they can also be understood as statements on the cultural allegiance of German Jewry. Oppenheim uses a historicized genre painting style to depict bourgeois values such as piety, a sense of family, education, and respectability. In doing so, he also underscores what these values have in common with the core values of the Christian bourgeoisie. Instead of emphasizing the exotic, as was later the case with Orientalism, the paintings invite the majority society to identify with the foreign traditions and customs of the Jews. From the perspective of German Jewry, they offer a nostalgic view of the settled life of their fathers’ generation, before Jews were granted equal civil rights in Germany: not the life of a marginalized minority, but a bourgeois one.