Icons of Just Is: Justice, Suffering, and the Artwork of Samuel Bak

Journal Title: Religions - Year 2017, Vol 8, Issue 6

Abstract

This paper examines select paintings by Holocaust survivor and painter Samuel Bak from his recent Just Is series. The essay explores ways Bak’s art bears witness to suffering. He creatively interrogates and reanimates the iconic figure of Lady Justice and the biblical principle of the lex talionis (“eye for an eye”) in order to fashion alternative icons fit for an age of atrocity and loss. Bak’s artwork gives visual expression to Theodor Adorno’s view of the precariousness of art after Auschwitz. It is art’s responsibility to attend to the burden of real suffering experiences (the burden of the empirical) and to think in contradictions, which renders art both adequate and inadequate in standing up against the injustice of other’s suffering. Through inventive juxtaposition of secular and sacred symbols, Bak displays the paradox of representation after the Holocaust and art’s precarious responsibility giving voice to suffering. Bak fashions visual spaces in which barbarity and beauty coincide and collide. He invites viewers into this space and into dialogue about justice’s standing and promises. Do Bak's remade icons of Just Is lament a permanent loss of justice and peace, or do they point tentatively to possibilities of life lived in a damaged world with an alternative Just Is? Bak’s artwork prompts such vexing questions for his viewers to contemplate and leaves them to decide what must be done.

Authors and Affiliations

Gary A. Phillips

Keywords

Related Articles

‘Partakers of the Divine Nature’: Ripley’s Discourses and the Transcendental Annus Mirabilis

In declaring 1836 the “Annus Mirabilis” of Transcendentalism, Perry Miller captured the emerging vitality of a new religious movement, described by Convers Francis as “the spiritual philosophy.” Francis first listed Ge...

The King Must Protect the Difference: The Juridical Foundations of Tantric Knowledge

Drawing upon inscriptional, art historical, as well as largely unstudied and unpublished textual evidence, this paper examines the conceptualization of religious diversity in the Medieval Deccan prior to the Islamic in...

Complicated Grief in the Aftermath of Homicide: Spiritual Crisis and Distress in an African American Sample

Both grieving the loss of a loved one and using spirituality or religion as an aid in doing so are common behaviors in the wake of death. This longitudinal examination of 46 African American homicide survivors follows...

The Seraphim above: Some Perspectives on the Theology of Orthodox Church Music

Some outstanding contributions notwithstanding, much recent scholarship in Western European languages concerning art and the sacred has been quite prolific but has generally avoided discussion of specifically liturgica...

Recovery Spirituality

There is growing interest in Alcoholics Anonymous (A.A.) and other secular, spiritual, and religious frameworks of long-term addiction recovery. The present paper explores the varieties of spiritual experience within A...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP25723
  • DOI https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8060108
  • Views 345
  • Downloads 8

How To Cite

Gary A. Phillips (2017). Icons of Just Is: Justice, Suffering, and the Artwork of Samuel Bak. Religions, 8(6), -. https://www.europub.co.uk/articles/-A-25723