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HAND SIGNED Hebrew STONE LITHOGRAPH Israel PINCHAS ABRAMOVICH New Horizons LTD
$ 66
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Description
DESCRIPTION:
Up for auction is an ORIGINAL Israeli HAND SIGNED , LIMITED and NUMBERED 6/20 Israeli - Jewish STONE LITHOGRAPH
by the acclaimed Israeli artist , The most admired painter PINCHAS ABRAMOVICH , One of the main founders of OFAKIN CHADASHIM - NEW HORIZONS . Depicting an ABSTRACT image ( Somewhat resembles the MIRO ABSTRACTS ) . Very limited edition of only TWENTY copies.
Hand SIGNED in Latin letters
"P.ABRAMOVICH" with pencil .
size is around 20
x 14 " . Very good condition.
( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images )
. The piece will be sent in a special protective rigid sealed packaging.
AUTHENTICITY
: This is an ORIGINAL vintage hand signed ART PIECE , NOT a reproduction or a reprint , It holds life long GUARANTEE for its AUTHENTICITY and ORIGINALITY.
PAYMENTS
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ayment method accepted : Paypal .
SHIPPMENT
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Shipp worldwide via registered airmail is $ 25 .
Will be sent in a special protective rigid sealed packaging.
Handling within 3-5 days after payment.
Pinchas Abramovich View artwork » View exhibitions » View videos and articles » Visit our Information Center to browse the artist file » File includes: 102 Articles 68 Artwork reproductions 27 Exhibition invitations Pinchas Abramovich, Israeli, 1909-1986, born in Russian Empire Pinhas Abramovich was born in Mazeikiai, Lithuania. He was the youngest of eight children. His parents, Orthodox Jews, owned a leather and shoe factory. After the outbreak of World War I, the family was exiled to Russia, where Abramovich studied in a Jewish school. In 1916, his mother died suddenly. With the start of the October Revolution, the family moved to Kharkov, Ukraine, and Abramovich was sent to a Russian communist school. In 1922, the family returned to Lithuania and settled in the village of Siad. Abramovich attended a Jewish school and was active in the Hatzofim youth movement. He began to study art in Shavli with an artist named Ananiv. In 1926, he enrolled in the Kovno Academy of Art. In 1927, he joined Hashomer Hatzair and immigrated to Palestine in 1929 with the Hehalutz movement to work on a farm in Binyamina. He also lived on Kibbutz Beit Zera. In 1932, Abramovich moved to Tel Aviv to paint at the studio of Joseph Zaritsky. In 1934, he was accepted to the Painters and Sculptors Association. In 1938-1941, he joined the Haganah and served in a unit commanded by Orde Wingate. In 1942-1943, he served with the British Army in Iraq and Iran. In 1948, he was one of the founders of the New Horizons group and showed his work at almost all its exhibitions. He also served twice as secretary of the movement, in 1948-1953 and 1957-1963. In 1956 and 1966, he visited South Africa and lived there for a while. In 1981 and 1984, he was chairman of the Painters and Sculptors Association. In 1985, he was honorary president of the association. Abramovich's early work was influenced by European Expressionism. His works, such as Camouflage Enterprise (1948), show some influence of Braquian cubism. In the 1950s, he began to paint in a more abstract style, typical of the New Horizons group. Education 1926 Kovno Academy of Art 1932 Studied painting with Joseph Zaritsky, Tel Aviv 1935-36 Académie de la Grande Chaumière, Paris Teaching 1929 Kibbutz Beit Zera 1947-52 Painting, schools in Tel Aviv-Yafo 1952-72 Seminar Hakibbutzim, Tel Aviv-Yafo Awards And Prizes 1966 Monaco Prize 1967 Dizengoff Prize for Painting and Sculpture 1985 Honorary Degree, Art Association, Frankfurt, Germany **** Pinchas Abramovich 1986 - 1909 was born in Mažeikiai, Lithuania in 1909, and was the youngest (out of 7 children), raised by Jewish traditional parents who owned a workshop and a shop for shoes and leathers. At the outbreak of World War I, his family was deported to Russia, where he studied in a Jewish school. After his mother's sudden death when he was just 7 years old, his family emigrated to Ukraine and in 1922 returned to Lithuania and settled in the town of Seda. Abramovitch attended a Jewish school and was active in the Scouts movement and Hashomer Hatzair. He received his first artistic education from an artist named Anniv in the town of Shibli. In 1926, at the age of 16, he began studying in an art school in Kovno. During 1927 and1929 he was a member of Hashomer Hatzair movement, worked in agricultural training and painted in his spare time. At the age of 20 he immigrated to Israel and became a member of a kibbutz for Lithuanian immigrates near Binyamina, where he first met the artists Yehiel Krize and Avigdor Stematsky. At the age of 22 he studied painting in a school at the Beit Zera kibbutz, where he also lived for a while. In 1932, at the age of 23, Abramowitz moved to Tel Aviv and worked for two years in Zaritsky's studio, together with Yehiel Krize, Arie Aroch, Chaya Schwartz and others. In 1934 Abramovich became a member of the Association of Painters and Sculptors. In 1935 he traveled to Paris where he painted at Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Returning to Israel via Lithuania and Italy, he met with Streichman in Kovno, and from 1938 to 1945 was an active member of the Haganah organization, he enlisted in the British army and served in Iraq and Iran. In the years that followed, Abramowitz taught painting in various schools in Tel Aviv. Pinhas Abramovitch was one of the founders of Ofakim Hadashim in 1948, he exhibited in almost all of its exhibitions and even served as the movement's secretary for many years. Between 1956 and 1966 he visited South Africa and stayed there for a while. Between 1952 and 1972, Abramovitch taught painting at the Kibbutzim College in Tel Aviv, and from 1981 to 1984 he was chairman of the Painters and Sculptors Association. ***Ofakim Hadashim Hebrew pronunciation: [(ʔ)ofaˈkim χadaˈʃim], lit. "New Horizons", is an art movement started in Tel Aviv in 1942. Contents 1 New Horizons 2 Realism and Social art 3 Group members 4 Exhibitions 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading New Horizons[edit] Joseph Zaritsky Naan, The Painter and the Model, 1949 Israel Museum, Jerusalem Zvi Meirovich gouache 1961 70x50 cm Dov Feigin Growth, 1959 Ein Harod Mueeum of Art The Ofakim Hadashim art movement began with a group of artists who mounted an exhibition in Tel Aviv's Habima national theater in December 1942, under the name "The Group of Eight". The group evolved into a coherent artistic movement only after the founding of the state of Israel in 1948. Members of the school included Arie Aroch, Zvi Meirowitch, Avraham Naton (Natanson), Avigdor Stematsky and Yehezkel Streichman. The work of sculptor Dov Feigin also appeared in the catalog of the 1942 exhibition, though it was not displayed. In February 1947 five of the original members of the group joined Joseph Zaritsky for an exhibit called "The Group of Seven" at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.[1] Members of the group stated that "The group is based in modernism, especially French, yet seeks a unique style that expresses our own reality".[2] For these artists, this was not only a statement of philosophy, but a practical work plan. Zaritsky, who served as chairman of the League of Painters and Sculptors in the Land of Israel, opposed the league's philosophy of equality among artists. In 1948, at the time of the opening of the artists' house that was to become the League's permanent home, he was delegated to select works for the Bienniale in Venice. His selections caused such an outrage among the members that he was ousted from his position. He walked out with a group of artists, and founded an alternative movement, the "New Horizons". On 9 November 1948, the Tel Aviv Museum of Art opened the first exhibit bearing the movement's name. Among the artists showing were Pinchas Abramovich, Marcel Janco, Aharon Kahana, Yohanan Simon, Avshalom Okashi and Moshe Castel, as well as movement founders Zaritsky, Streichman and Feigin. The group sought a style that reflected the striving for Zionism and Modernism. This style was largely dictated by the leading artists of the group - Zaritsky, Stematsky Mairovich and Streichman. In practice, this style was a variant of European modernism. The style has been called "lyrical abstract", but in fact, there was little purely abstract art, but rather works rooted in the local visual landscape. This essentially figurative style was pushed toward the abstract by bold brush strokes, and a strong use of bright colors typical of the "Land of Israel" style, reflecting the strong Mediterranean light. Formats were generally rather small, and the style was similar to European abstract art before the second World War, akin to the art of Wassily Kandinsky, and unlike the abstract art prevalent in the United States at the time. For example, in his series "Yehiam" (1949–1952), Zaritsky depicts scenes from the establishment of Kibbutz Yehiam in northern Israel. The early paintings in this series (mostly watercolors) depict the natural landscapes of the region, while the later paintings are (mostly oil) abstractions of these earlier scenes. This progression, contends art critic and curator Mordecai Omer, reflects Zaritsky's belief that external visual reality is the basis of artistic originality.[3] Zvi Meirovich, a prominent members of Okakim Hadashim he painted in the abstract lyric style but unlike his colleagues Mairovich was more inclined to a German rather than a French pallette. Hs bold use of black and reds particularly in the gouaches. The big breakthrough was in oil pastels, that only he made in large format. Using a deep space photo surface rather than a flat paper was pioneering moment. Others in the group, however, deviated from this style. Marcel Janco, of international fame for his involvement in the Dada movement in Europe in the 1930s, did not adopt this approach to abstraction; rather his art uses European Cubist and Expressionist styles to create a Jewish-Zionist narrative. Moshe Castel, also, went through a transformation during the 1950s from abstraction to expressionism characteristic of the Canaanist movement. In the field of sculpture, the group introduced new media. Yechiel Shemi, Dov Feigin, and, after a sojourn in Britain, Itzhak Danziger, introduced welded steel as a new medium. This new form freed these artists from the figurative character of stone and wood carving, for a more purely abstract oeuvre. Here, too, however, there is frequent reference to the Canaanite figurativeness and symbolism. Indeed, during the 1950s, the "New Horizons" group tended more and more toward the abstract, and away from reliance on the figurative. Zaritsky led this shift, which was rooted in what he saw as a guiding ideology. Some members of the group, however, rejected this ideology, and eventually quit the movement. These included Janco, Aharon Kahana and Yehiel Simon.[4] Realism and Social art[edit] While the abstract and secular works of the New Horizons group had profound influence on the course of art in Israel, they were nonetheless considered at the time to be on the fringes of mainstream art, which was mostly figurative and often bearing explicit Jewish and Zionist messages. This explicitly nationalist trend in Israeli art was denounced by its opponents as "regionalism".[5] New Horizon critics, who maintained that art was international and universal, were opposed by the ideology of the Bezalel School at the time. Mordechai Ardon, head of Bezalel, wrote in 1954, "Every artist, like every citizen, must serve his country in heart and in soul".[6] New Horizons artists, too, despite their avowed adherence to a philosophy of universality, often expressed in their works sentiments of nationalism, Zionism, and socialism. For example, Zaritsky, one of the leading ideologues of the universalist school, produced series of paintings focusing on Israeli kibbutzim - his series "Yehiam", and a similar series on Naan (a kibbutz in central Israel), 1950–1952. Both these series include abstractions of the Israeli landscape. Zvi Meirovich one of the founders of New Horizons produced a series of large oil paintings called Mizpe Ramon focusing on the Israeli deseret. Sculptor Dov Feigin produced "Wheat Sheaves" in 1956, and Dadaist Janco painted "Soldiers", "Air raid Alarms" and "Maabarot" (jerry-built communities housing new Jewish immigrants in the 1950s). Some of the New Horizons artists belonged to the "Center for Advanced Culture" run by the Socialist-Zionist youth movement "Hashomer Hatzair".[7] This activity culminated in the founding of the artists' village Ein Harod by a group of artists headed by Janco. There, Janco hoped to found a new socialist and artistic utopia. Mordechai Ardon's work stands out from that of other New Horizons artists for dealing with the mystical and historical, rather than concentrating on the present. His canvases often depict episodes from Jewish history, from Biblical scenes to the Holocaust. In 1965 Raffi Lavie founded a group called "10+", which sought an alternative to the "lyric abstraction" of the New Horizons group. Group members[edit] Pinchas Abramovich Mordechai Arieli Arie Aroch Robert Baser Moshe Castel Itzhak Danziger Kosso Eloul Dov Feigin Marcel Janco (Iancu) Aharon Kahana Chaim Kiewe Avigdor Renzo Luisada Zvi Meirovich Avraham Naton (Natanson) Avshalom Okashi Moshe Propes Shmuel Raayoni Yechiel Shemi Avigdor Stematsky Moshe Sternschuss Yehezkel Streichman Jacob Wexler Ruth Zarfati Joseph Zaritsky Gila Blass Exhibitions[edit] Painters and Sculptors Pavilion, Jerusalem, 23 November 1949 – 23 December 1949 Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 11 January 1953 – 12 January 1953 Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 22 March 1955 – 22 April 1955 Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 5 June 1956 – 6 June 1956 Museum for Modern Art, Haifa, 1957 Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 1958 Museum of Art, Ein Harod 13 July 2006 Museum of Art, Ein Harod, 13 October 2009 – 11 November 2009 Museum for Modern Art, Haifa, 27 December 2012 – 16 January 2013 ebay 5461 folder 198