Jacob Kramer (1892-1962)

A Russian-Jewish immigrant, Kramer arrived in Britain in 1900. He studied at Leeds School of Art and briefly at the Slade School of Fine Art in London, supported by modernist collector and Vice Chancellor of Leeds University Michael Sadler and the Jewish Education Aid Society. His Slade associates included ‘Whitechapel Boys’ Mark Gertler and David Bomberg, with whom he exhibited in 1914 as part of the ‘Jewish Section’ in a review of modern movements at the Whitechapel Art Gallery. In 1915 he was invited to exhibit with the Vorticists and published in Wyndham Lewis' journal Blast. During the First World War, he spent a short time as a regimental librarian, a post facilitated by Herbert Read. His most celebrated painting, The Day of Atonement, draws on contemporary influences including Cubism, Futurism and Vorticism to capture the display of devotion during the most solemn day in the Jewish religious calendar using a new modernist vocabulary. In his later years, Kramer became a well-known figure in Leeds carrying out characteristic portraits of Leeds locals and notable visitors.

Other exhibitions by Ben Uri Research Unit

Ben Uri Research Unit

Rediscovering Wolmark - A Pioneer of British Modernism

Ben Uri Research Unit

Teacher and Pupil: David Bomberg and Frank Auerbach

Ben Uri Research Unit

Selected works by Eva Frankfurther (1930-1959)

Ben Uri Research Unit

German Refugee Artists to Britain since 1900

Ben Uri Research Unit

Thirty-six Pounds and Ninety-five Pence - Artworks by Contemporary Migrant Artists