Auction 13 Eretz Israel, settlement, anti-Semitism, Holocaust, postcards and photographs, Judaica, Rabbinical Letters
By DYNASTY
Oct 18, 2021
Abraham Ferrera 1 , Jerusalem, Israel

The auction will take place on Monday, October 18nd, 2021 at 19:00 (Israel time).
The auction has ended

LOT 24:

Clemenceau keeps the money bags - antisemitic poster - Monsters Exhibition

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Clemenceau keeps the money bags - antisemitic poster - Monsters Exhibition


L'ex-copain de Cornélius Herz - - Ex-friend of Cornelius Hertz. Poster No. 10 from the Musée des Horreurs series ["Monsters Exhibition" / "Museum of Horrors"]. Paris, [1899-1900]. Hand-painted lithographic print depicting Georges Clemenceau as Hyaenidae, holding bags of pounds sterling, Alludes to the accusations made in the Norton case (1893). The title of the Poster is reminiscent of his connections with Cornelius Hertz before the Panama Scandal (1892). Clemenceau, a French statesman who has twice served as prime minister of France and is considered one of Dreyfus' supporters, published in 1898 in the newspaper "L'Aurore" Emil Zola's article "J'accuse" - "I blame", Proving Dreyfus' innocence, and even dedicated the title page to it. Teh poster Published in December 1899, signed by V. Lenepveu. French.


The series "Monsters Exhibition" was published during the Dreyfus affair under a pseudonym, and included 51 large posters with anti-Dreyfus illustrations, antisemitic, and against the "Bonim". The series was published in France over a period of about a year, between October 1899 and December 1900. The original plan was to issue 200 Posters in the series, but in fact only 51 came out. The first posters in the series sold over 300,000 copies. In October 1899 the French police arrested a number of peddlers who sold posters from the series on the orders of District Commander Louis Lapin. According to some reports, Lapin ordered the distribution of posters to be stopped following a request he received from Baron de Rothschild, who claimed that the damage in distributing them was irreversible. In February 1900 the local police sent letters in which they threatened to revoke the trade license from Merchants who would sell the posters, and since then their distribution has stopped.


65X50 cm. Slight tears in margins - Reinforced with paper gluing on the back. Good condition.


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