The photograph was taken in the 1920s or 1930s . in Myślenice or one of the neighbouring towns. It belongs to a collection of approximately three hundred individual and group portraits from the Myślenice area, captured as gelatin silver negatives on glass plates. Twelve of them depict Jews, almost exclusively men. It is difficult to definitively determine the author of the photos but some of them may be related to the photographic studio of Stefania and Adam Janowski, who operated in Myślenice during the interwar period. It is unclear whether they took portraits of Myślenice residents as part of their business and on clients' orders or on the commission of a local ethnographer or folklorist interested in the culture, as suggested by the nature of the frames.
The circumstances of acquiring the collection of Myślenice photographs by the Ethnographic Museum in Krakow are not entirely clear but it is certain that it happened during the tenure of its first director, Seweryn Udzieli (1857–1937). The glass plates, stored in specially prepared wooden boxes with Udzieli's original descriptions, are still kept in the museum's archive. From 2018 to 2021, they underwent professional conservation and digitization and were made available online.
The influx of the Jewish community to Myślenice began relatively late, in the 1860s, due to the existing restrictions (privilegium de non tolerandis Judaeis) . At the beginning of the 20th century, when the described photographs were taken, the city was home to 675 Jews who constituted almost one-fifth of the total population. They had their own cemetery, synagogue, mikveh, and schools. They were mainly engaged in trade and craftsmanship. The events of 22/23 June 1936, known as the "march on Myślenice," had a wide impact throughout the country. Nationalist paramilitary groups, led by the owner of the estate in nearby Chorowice – Adam Doboszyński, marched on the city, cutting it off from telephone lines along the way. After disarming the local police station, the armed mob, wielding revolvers, clubs, and axes, attacked Jewish shops. Goods looted from the vandalised premises, mainly clothing materials, were set on fire with gasoline in the Myślenice market square. Several Jews were severely beaten, and there was an unsuccessful attempt to set the synagogue on fire. The history of Jews of Myślenice concluded with tragic events in the summer of 1942 when most of them were deported to the transit camp in Skawina, where some were killed, and others were sent to the extermination camps in Bełżec and Treblinka.
The photograph is an individual portrait of a middle-aged Jewish man, taken outdoors. The man has a dark beard and payot, and a velvet yarmulke on his head. He is dressed in a worn, long, single-breasted coat, known as a gaberdine (Yiddish: kapote), fastened to the left side. He is seated against the backdrop of a canvas screen painted with plant motifs, with a clearly visible tree trunk on the left side of the frame and a vase of flowers (ivy?) beside it. The photograph was taken from the left three-quarter view and in a waist-length shot.