Obj. ID: 48411
Hebrew Illuminated Manuscripts Shiviti, Bulgaria, circa 1900
The following description was prepared by William Gross:
The Shiviti plaque takes its name from a phrase in the Psalms, "Shiviti Adonai Lenegdi Tamid". "I will always hold the Lord before me." During morning prayers, the 67th Psalm is read as a part of the liturgy. The making of such visual pages to augment the reading started almost 500 years ago. It began because of a particular story or legend. The custom relates that if one gazes on the form of the Menorah while reciting the Psalm, or reads the Psalm written in the form of a Menorah, the person is carried back to the Temple, standing before the golden Temple Menorah itself. To complete the illusion, some of the Temple implements were often illustrated. The mysticism of the idea is clear, and the Shiviti page is often filled with Kabbalistic abbreviations as well as the Menorah form. Sometimes, depending on the size and complexity of the image, other texts read during the time of prayer are also presented on the sheet.
Such pages appear as small sheets to be inserted into a prayer book and taken out when the psalm is recited or as large pages to be hung on the wall of the synagogue for the viewing by the whole congregation. The sheet was also used on the wall of a home or Sukkah. Later still, the Shiviti could be printed in the prayer book or painted on the wall of the synagogue. There are numerous examples of both the prayer book tradition and the wall plaque tradition in the Gross Family Collection.
On this finely rendered hand written and painted example, use is made of the Jewish art of micrography, the rendering of shapes using Hebrew texts. Here the lattice work decoration is formed in micrographic writing using the text of the "Perek Shira". This is a liturgical poem in which all the animals of the world vie with each other in praising God. This is not a text normally used for such a page, but is in concert with increasing the concentration and sense of the beholder of the Divine. There is another example of a very similar example by the same artist/scribe in a private collection in New York (which may be the example sold at Sotheby's, December 2018) and a third example in the collection of the JTS Library which was dedicated in Bulgaria in 1916/17.