



HERMANN STRUCK German, 1876-1944
Luba, from: Sketches from Russia – Jews of the East | Luba: Skizzen aus Russland. Ostjuden, ca. 1915
Original Hand Signed Lithograph on Wove Paper
26 x 17 cm. / 10.2 x 6.7 in.
Unnumbered
This lithograph is hand signed in pencil by the artist "Struck" in lower right image.
It is one of 50 portraits included in the 1915 portfolio “Skizzen aus Russland. Ostjuden” [Sketches from Russia – Jews of the East].
It was printed by Druckerei des Oberbefehlshabers Ost, [German High Command] during the German occupation of Poland and Lithuania during the First World War.
Note: This sitter for the portrait was named Luba and Hermann Struck first drew her in what is now the modern day north-eastern Polish city of Białystok. Other impressions of this work can be found in the collections of the Jüdisches Museum, Berlin and the Leo Baeck Institute, New York.
Condition: Good condition. The left sheet edge unevenly trimmed. The sheet toned towards the edges. A short tear in the right margin. Staining in the right of the image.
It is one of 50 portraits included in the 1915 portfolio “Skizzen aus Russland. Ostjuden” [Sketches from Russia – Jews of the East].
It was printed by Druckerei des Oberbefehlshabers Ost, [German High Command] during the German occupation of Poland and Lithuania during the First World War.
Note: This sitter for the portrait was named Luba and Hermann Struck first drew her in what is now the modern day north-eastern Polish city of Białystok. Other impressions of this work can be found in the collections of the Jüdisches Museum, Berlin and the Leo Baeck Institute, New York.
Condition: Good condition. The left sheet edge unevenly trimmed. The sheet toned towards the edges. A short tear in the right margin. Staining in the right of the image.
$ 180.00
Further images
This sitter for the portrait was named Luba and Hermann Struck first drew her in what is now the modern day north-eastern Polish city of Białystok. Other impressions of this...
This sitter for the portrait was named Luba and Hermann Struck first drew her in what is now the modern day north-eastern Polish city of Białystok. Other impressions of this work can be found in the collections of the Jüdisches Museum, Berlin and the Leo Baeck Institute, New York.