Ad
related to: gordon gallery tel aviv
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Yekutieli's work began to appear in the streets of Tel Aviv in early 2005, often featuring a long-armed, long-legged unisex character. In 2013, after taking part in the INSIDE JOB, a street-art group show in the Helena Rubenstein Pavilion for Contemporary Art, Yekutieli began exhibiting in Gordon Gallery in Tel Aviv.
2012 Short Escape, Gordon Gallery 2 for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv, Israel; 2014 Spare Parts, The Open museum, Tefen, Israel [3] 2015 Principle of Uncertainty, Gordon Gallery, Tel Aviv, Israel; 2015 Shelf Life, The Weizmann Institute of Science, Israel; 2016 SEVEN, The Ann and Ari Rosenblatt Prize for Visual Art, The Artist house, Tel Aviv, Israel
1977 Paintings and Drawings, Sof Hashdera, Tel-Aviv. 1990 "Figure", Sculpture, Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art. [3]1990 Works on Paper, Gordon Gallery, Tel-Aviv. 1993 "Head", Sculptures and works on paper, Gordon Gallery.
The following year, Weinfeld experimented with posing figures painted in diverse styles in realistic scenes. The works, titled "Sentences", were exhibited at the Gordon Gallery in Tel-Aviv in 1982. In 1991 Weinfeld exhibited two series of works, "Mother's Clichés" and "For the initiated history consists of just a few words".
Bergner lived in Tel Aviv-Yafo. [5] She died on 9 May 2022 and was buried in Kibbutz Einat cemetery. Audrey Bergner's works can be found in public spaces including "Characters in the Desert" from 1983, displayed on Mount Scopus Campus while another of the series is displayed in the General Reading Room of the National Library in Jerusalem.
Druks grew up in Tel Aviv where he studied at the High Institute for Painting and became involved in avant-garde art and theatre circles. He organized group exhibitions based around concerns for the natural environment, including Plus Air Pollution at the Gordon Gallery in Tel Aviv, and Environment Paintings and Sculptures at the Billy Rose ...
Shosh Kormosh (1948–2001) was an Israeli artist known for her hand-processed black-and-white photographs that carried a painting-like sensitivity and delicacy. Her work explored profound themes of bereavement, loss, the memory of The Holocaust, and the pervasive sense of loneliness in an increasingly alienated world.
Joav BarEl was born in Tel Aviv, Mandatory Palestine, to Aharon (“Aharonchik”) Elkind and Shlomit Cohen Tzedek.He had a younger sister, Mirana Barel-Blay (b. 1939), and a younger half-brother, Joel BarEl, from his father's second marriage.