Auction 91 Part 2 "Shanah Tovah" Postcards and Greeting Cards from the Collection of Dr. Haim Grossman

Collection of Greeting Cards Decorated with Pressed Flowers from Palestine – "Shanah Tovah" Cards

Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium

28 greeting cards decorated with pressed flowers from Palestine, most of them for Rosh Hashanah. Various publishers, 20th century.
Included: • 11 "shanah tovah" cards printed in Hebrew and English, with pressed flowers from Mount Zion and the poem Ode to Zion by Judah Halevi. • "Greetings from the Holy Land", greeting card printed in English with a picture of General Edmund Allenby entering Jerusalem, pressed flowers and a greeting for Christmas and the New Year. • "Grüsse aus dem Heiligen Land", greeting card printed in German, with a picture of Ben Yehuda Street in Jerusalem, pressed flowers and a greeting for Christmas and the New Year. • Greeting card printed in gold, in Hebrew and German, with pressed flowers from Jerusalem. • Two "shanah tovah" greeting cards published by Lion the Printer, with flowers from the mountains of Judea. • Two greeting cards published by Lev-Hartouv Ltd., Tel-Aviv; one for Rosh Hashanah and one for Passover. • And more.

Size and condition vary. 

Provenance: The Dr. Haim Grossman collection.


Dr. Chaim Grossman's Israeliana collection is exceptional in size, quality and variety. Grossman, an educator, historian and folklorist, was a methodical, knowledgeable and meticulous collector, and his deep understanding of Palestinian-Yishuv and Israeli material culture set the ground for a one-of-a-kind collection of mundane and less than mundane objects – from the ephemeral, the negligible, the widely available to the rare and singular.
The "shana tovah" collection left by Grossman – a considerable part of which is offered in the present auction – comprises thousands of postcards, cards, letters and other paper items made and sent year after year in, by and for Jewish communities: in Eastern and Western Europe, Palestine, Iran, Iraq, North Africa, North and South America, as part of the tradition of sending hand-written, hand-drawn or printed new year’s greetings, which originated in German Jewry but with the rise of postcards spread to most communities. The earliest items in the collection date to the 1860s; the latest were made in the late 20th century. It includes both beautifully designed, rare, early and singular postcards and cards, and mass-made, highly popular items sold in large quantities, in varying production quality and in dozens of repeating versions, each according to the technical abilities achieved by the local publication industry.
The collector's devotion to his collection is evident in the sheer number of items, in the wealth of techniques, visuals and themes, and in the thorough, intersectional categorization by period, origin, motif, technique and material. Glitter and relief embossing, scraps, lace and golden ink, lithography and celluloid transparencies, plastic, textile and metal decorations; Yiddish, Hebrew, English, Russian, French, Polish, German greetings; children, angels, families, pets, immigrants, travelers, professionals; portraits and tinted reproductions; Judaism, Zionism, the state, the army; the ritual and the mundane; any new year's greeting, in any form whatsoever, had a place in Grossman's collection and was honored as a historical testimony, as a timeless, invaluable treasure.

"Shanah Tovah" Postcards and Greeting Cards from the Collection of Dr. Haim Grossman
"Shanah Tovah" Postcards and Greeting Cards from the Collection of Dr. Haim Grossman