HUC’s Heller Museum exhibits prints based on the Passover song about a little goat and the disasters that follow in its wake. (New York Jewish Week) — “Had Gadya,” the playful song about a destructive ...
Had Gadya, the playful, threatening and ultimately reassuring song that ends many Seder evenings among Ashkenazi Jews, has a long history in the Haggada. It emerged from German folk songs to be first ...
Used to tell the story on the night of Passover That his rabbi the Gaon Chatam Sofer used to tell on the night of Passover That the Gaon Rav Yonatan Eybeschutz of blessed memory Used to raise many ...
In 1918-19, the artist El Lissitzky illustrated the Had Gadya in paintings. Had Gadya (A Kid's Tale) is a folk song that follows Seder, the religious meal served in Jewish homes to begin the Passover ...
Photos courtesy of HUC-JIR. American artist Frank Stella’s “Had Gadya” series has arrived at the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion (HUC-JIR) in Los Angeles. This vivid collection of ...
As the dishes are cleared and the Passover Seder begins to wind down, many families end their celebration with the rousing traditional folk song "Had Gadya." In his picture-book interpretation, Chwast ...
Illustrations After El Lissitzky's Had Gadya is a portfolio of twelve prints that Frank Stella created after he saw El lissitzky's 1919 gouaches illustrating each line of the traditional Jewish ...
Lithograph, linocut and screenprint in colors with hand-coloring and collage, on heavy wove paper ...
The Passover song about all the awe-inspiring and dreadful things that happen after a man sells a goat for “two zuzim” is generally sung by very sleepy children, in a sonorous tune that reminds ...