Matthew Collings says his work depicting Israeli violence against Palestinians has been intentionally misinterpreted as anti-Semitic.
Norfolk, United Kingdom – Matthew Collings, an English artist in his 70s, sketches on the papers in front of him at his home in the scenic coastal county of Norfolk.
Over the past six years, since moving away from the art commentary and criticism that he focused on for decades, he has made more than 3,000 drawings.
Since October 2023, a good third of them have focused on Israel’s genocide against Palestinians.
Many were to be displayed in a May iteration of his show, Drawings Against Genocide, at a London gallery this month. However, the show was abruptly cancelled following an intervention by a group called the UK Lawyers for Israel (UKLFI), which claimed the images were anti-Semitic.
The exhibit, which debuted under its current title in Margate earlier this year at Joseph Wales Studios, is comprised of 130 drawings that depict violence against Palestinians, with various blood-bathed military, political, and business leaders.
“It’s very clear in the title what they’re against, they’re not against Jews,” Collings said of his artworks in an interview with Al Jazeera.
“They’re against genocide. The genocide isn’t committed by Jews. It’s committed by Zionists. It’s committed by Israel, which is a state that would not exist were it not for Zionism,” he added, referring to the nationalist, political ideology that called for the creation of a Jewish state. “Nothing in my drawings for genocide is remotely anti-Semitic.”
The allegations of anti-Semitism have focused on the portrayals of Jewish people in the drawings and allegations that various images depict blood libel, child sacrifice, and other hateful tropes.
But Collings said there are no images of such tropes in the show.
“Of 130 drawings, 30 have recognisable public figures who are Jewish, and half of those people are heroes in my eyes,” Collings said.
These include images of Moses teaching the commandment “Thou shalt not kill”, and a tea party of Walter Benjamin, Hannah Arendt, Karl Marx, and the American political scientist and activist Norman Finkelstein.
“And the half that I criticise, I don’t criticise for being Jewish, I criticise them for supporting genocide,’ Collings explained to Al Jazeera.
One drawing depicts the American comedian Jerry Seinfeld, who regularly expresses support for Israel’s army amid the genocide.
“It depicts demons and monsters, but they are artistic metaphors for Zionism, brutality, and violence. They’re not Jews covered in scaly skin or demon eyes. They are an abstract concept, which is what art has always done.”
At the Margate show, a pro-Israel activist and writer “staged an outrage stunt”, appearing at the gallery and accusing Collings of being anti-Semitic, the artist said. Shortly after the opening, pro-Israel activists contacted Kent Police with claims that the show was anti-Semitic. Kent Police, however, found that no criminal offences had taken place.
The writer in question was Sunday Telegraph columnist Zoe Strimpel, who later spoke about her experience on GB News, a right-wing media outlet, saying she wanted the police to “do something”. She said she had met Collings at the show and told him that the Israeli state “is also the Jewish state”.

“They did my work for me,” Collings said. “Jewishness does not mean Zionism.”
Shortly after reaching their conclusion, however, Kent Police received more than 1,000 nearly identical emails from pro-Israel senders protesting their decision, prompting an investigation of a possible distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack.
Collings and his partner have, similarly, received hundreds of thousands of emails since various pro-Israel news outlets began covering the case and advocating for the closure of the show.
“Everything – every single thing – that they say about the show turned out to be untrue,” Collings says. “There is no anti-Semitic content to the show, as the police said.”
In a letter obtained by Al Jazeera, originally sent to the Margate venue and dated March 22, 2026, UKLFI urged the gallery to cancel the exhibit and claimed that “many of the images are likely to breach” public disorder laws, warning that “for your information, a person guilty of an offence” could be fined.

In the statement, UKLFI wrote, “We welcome the decision to cancel this exhibition. Freedom of expression is a fundamental right, but it does not extend to the promotion of material that relies on anti-Semitic tropes, dehumanising imagery, and conspiracy narratives about Jews.”
Delta House has not responded to Al Jazeera’s request for comment.
Anna Ost, senior legal officer at the European Legal Support Center (ELSC), said she has seen silencing tactics before.
“I can’t comment on this particular instance as I haven’t seen the exhibition; however, the fact that the Kent Police found no case to answer points to this being another example of the pattern of legally baseless threats directed at suppressing pro-Palestine expression,” she told Al Jazeera.
Despite the attacks, Collings remains undeterred, with upcoming shows being scheduled throughout the UK and in Australia.
“Wherever there is a battle lost, several are won,” he said, putting down his sketching pencil.
However, the cancellation of his May show created logistical concerns.
“Whatever the venue is, the person in charge of it has to be an activist like us. If they’re not, they will be intimidated or somehow persuaded by UK Lawyers for Israel,” he said.

Despite receiving support from onlookers and pro-Palestine organisers, Collings expressed disappointment in the art world.
“I hear from famous and established artists who privately encourage me and buy my work and say they’re sorry to hear this is happening to me, but they don’t necessarily come out publicly and say they’re sorry,” he said. “Pro-Palestine sentiment is not welcome in the art world.”
