History of Art and Architecture

"The Curious Incident of the Pig in the Haggadah"

Thursday, March 5, 2020 - 4:00pm to 6:00pm

202 Frick Fine Arts Building

Adam S. Cohen, University of Toronto

For millennia, Jews have gathered on the first night of Passover to recount the Exodus from Egypt, and for the past 700 years the relatively stable text for this paraliturgical service has beenwritten in the haggadah. Beginning in the late thirteenth century, some Jews commissioned luxurious manuscript copies replete with images that serve as supplements and commentaries to the text. In this lecture, I explore two fourteenth-century examples that contain verysurprising pictures. The appearance of a pig in a Lombard haggadah and the depictionof an African slave in the famous Sarajevo Haggadah provide an opportunity to explore issues concerning the ways medieval Jews constructed views oftheir relationship to God, to one another, andto their non-Jewish neighbors.

About the SpeakerAdam S. Cohen received his PhD from The Johns Hopkins University and is Associate Professor of ArtHistory at the University of Toronto, where he has taught since 2003. He has held fellowships from the Duke Center for Jewish Studies, the Israel Institute for Advanced Studies, and the European Institutes for Advanced Studies, and he has been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the Getty Foundation. His publications on medieval and Jewish manuscript art include The Uta Codex: Art, Philosophy, and Reform in Eleventh-Century Germanyand Eye and Mind: Essays in Anglo-Saxon and Early Medieval Art by Robert Deshman. His chapter “Monastic Art and Architecture: 7001050” has just been published in The Cambridge History of Medieval Western Monasticism, and he is currently completing Art and Architecture of the Middle Ages: Exploring a Connected World (with Jill Caskey and Linda Safran). He recently completed two terms as editor (with Linda Safran) of Gesta, the journal of the International Center of Medieval Art. His book on the illustrated haggadah, Signs and Wonders: 100 Haggada Masterpieces, was published by Tobey/Koren in 2018.

Sunday, March 8, 11:30am-12:30pm: Cohen will also give a lecture at New Light Congregation, Beth Shalom Synagogue (5915 Beacon Street), titled Passover Rituals in the Illustrated Haggadah.

Co-sponsored by Jewish Studies & History of Art and Architecture