
This David’s Shield Lampshade was made by Dr. Asher Eder with his own hands. In the 1970’s it used to light the room of Mishkan Noam, Spiritual Center in the Galilee.
This blog (by Zeev Barkan) is dedicated to the Star of David, its history, its various meanings and usages in different cultures. It includes thousands of pictures of Star of David, six-pointed stars, hexagrams, Solomon's Seals, Magen Davids and yellow badges,and served as a resource for three books and four art exhibitions.

This David’s Shield Lampshade was made by Dr. Asher Eder with his own hands. In the 1970’s it used to light the room of Mishkan Noam, Spiritual Center in the Galilee.
Copyright: Sabina Saad 2008
Size: 20X20 cm
Acrylic on canvas
Cutting part of the canvas in the shape of the yellow badge, so that it alludes to the Jewish victims during the Holocaust.
The work is one of a series.
Sabina Saad says that Jews always regarded themselves as part of the regime under which they lived, and were meaningful contributors to those places – so that their disappearing in WWII left a hole (symbolically) in the flag of each country.
In Libya 5000 Jews were locked in concentration camps and 500 of them died from dysentery. 160 Jews were transferred to Bergen-Belsen.
Dan Feldman sent me this six-pointed star shaped fireworks, and I plan to light it on my birthday (then We’ll have another photo of it in action and maybe a video film).
Thanks, Dan.
Two Stars of David appear on this Bezalel Tile from the 1920’s, above a painting of Jerusalem. From Wikipedia in Hebrew; entry: “The symbol of Tel Aviv, Zeev Holtzman collection”.
Stars of David appear numerous times on Niza Levin's work titled The Sea of Shields
Pastel on Canvas
See: http://www.akatar.com/Gal_MagenDavid.htm
Zoom in (click the All Sizes button above the picture):
[Zvi Malnovitzer was] raised and educated in a Hasidic community in Bnai Brak, Israel and while learning at the Ponevezh Yeshiva he somehow found the time and energy to learn to draw.
In his work titled Hasidic Huppah, which was created after 2000, oil on wood
The overall space soars upward to contain the red huppah that shelters the celebrants; effectively floating over them is the barely visible Magen David.
See:
http://www.jewishpress.com/UploadedImages/stdImage/450mcbee-080108-huppah.jpg