I have only just heard of The Illustrated Pirkei Avot, published back in 2017. This is the handiwork of a US-based artist, Jessica Tamar Deutsch, and it clearly found favour with the reviewer who wrote it up for the Jewish Book Council in the following terms:
While there are many commentaries to choose from, one of the most interesting and engaging is the recently released Illustrated Pirkei Avot by Jessica Tamar Deutsch. Navigating between the serious and whimsical with equal measure, Deutsch has transmuted every word of Pirkei Avot from the stuff of parchment and crinkled pages to a handsome, singular collection of sequential art and imagination. (For good measure, the entire tractate is reproduced at the back of the book, just in case readers want to refer to the original while reading.)
The review continues in the same vein, adding that
Deutsch’s work is a new paradigm. It would be too much to say that this work breaks all the rules of normative Talmudic commentary; that was probably never her intention. To the contrary, the accessibility stems from the book’s appeal to all ages in a welcoming way. One could be a scholar or a neophyte when it comes to learning Talmud and still learn something from this work. At times Deutsch inserts a thought that is separate from the art (i.e. the story of Hillel and the skull) that adds an element of reader/author interaction where it might not exist in other commentaries.
I am not averse to the use of graphic art as a means of promoting the message of Avot, as is obvious from the launch of Avot Today's Instagram account. I do however wonder how a young and female artist would handle some of the more sensitive content of Avot, for example Hillel's pronouncement on women in the second perek ("...the more women, the more witchcraft; the more maidservants, the more immorality...", 2:8).
If any reader of this weblog is familiar with the book, can he or she please share any relevant thoughts on it and on the extent to which it succeeds in opening up the content of Pirkei Avot to an audience of people who respond more to images than to the printed word.
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The Illustrated Pirkei Avot is available from Print-O-Craft Press, Philadelphia Pa. Details here: https://printocraftpress.com/.../the-illustrated-pirkei.../