Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
Including: Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan, Old Master Works, Israeli Art and Numismatics
December 21, 2021
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Displaying 217 - 228 of 389
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $688
Including buyer's premium
Ruth Schloss (1922-2013), Demonstration, [1950s]. Wash and acrylic on paper. 50X35 cm. Framed, 63.5X48.5 cm with frame.
Ruth Schloss (1922-2013) was born in Nuremberg, Germany and immigrated to Palestine with her family in 1935. When she was only sixteen she began her studies at the Bezalel School, and then joined the founding group of Kibbutz Lehavot HaBashan. Schloss devoted her talents to the art and printing enterprises of the Kibbutz Movement, working as an illustrator for the newspaper "Mishmar LiYeladim" and as a book cover designer for "Sifriyat Poalim." From ca. 1950 to 1952, she studied art at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris. After returning to Israel, due to the rift in the Kibbutz Movement, she left her kibbutz. Schloss was a member of the Communist Party, and her paintings, in the style of Social Realism, often conveyed a socialist message, exposing social gaps and the ramifications of class distinctions. Her works focused on the weaker members of society – downtrodden women, hungry children, workers, and residents of transit camps. Later, she turned her attention to the lives of women, to the helplessness of the birth experience, and to the decline of old age, all of which she painted from the perspective – and with the sensitivity – of a woman viewing human beings as rooted in their surroundings. In the words of the poet Nathan Zach: "Her motto remained the same over the years. Life itself. Without embellishment."
Reference: Gila Ballas, Ilana Tenenbaum, and Yael Lotan (curators and eds.), "Social Realism in the 50's, Political Art in the 90's, " exhibition catalogue, Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, 1998, Hebrew and English (p. 91, no. 11).
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $3,000
Unsold
Ruth Schloss (1922-2013), A Waiting Worker, 1956. Oil on canvas. Signed and dated. 54X81 cm.
Ruth Schloss (1922-2013) was born in Nuremberg, Germany and immigrated to Palestine with her family in 1935. When she was only sixteen she began her studies at Bezalel, and then joined the founding group of Kibbutz Lehavot HaBashan. Schloss devoted her talents to the art and printing enterprises of the Kibbutz Movement, working as an illustrator for the newspaper "Mishmar LiYeladim" and as a book cover designer for "Sifriyat Poalim." From ca. 1950 to 1952, she studied art at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris. After returning to Israel, due to the rift in the Kibbutz Movement, she left her kibbutz. Schloss was a member of the Communist Party, and her paintings, in the style of Social Realism, often conveyed a socialist message, exposing social gaps and the ramifications of class distinctions. Her works focused on the weaker members of society – downtrodden women, hungry children, workers, and residents of transit camps. Later, she turned her attention to the lives of women, to the helplessness of the birth experience, and to the decline of old age, all of which she painted from the perspective – and with the sensitivity – of a woman viewing human beings as rooted in their surroundings. In the words of the poet Nathan Zach: "Her motto remained the same over the years. Life itself. Without embellishment." The present work was presented at the exhibition at the Haifa Museum of Art titled "Social Realism in the 50's, Political Art in the 90's" (1998). In the exhibition catalogue, the curator Gila Ballas write as follows: "Many of her paintings of the 1950s were labourers. 'A waiting worker… is the most important of her works in this area. Withdrawn, preoccupied with worries, he hunched on the curb waiting for casual employment to come his way. The strong realistic design, the emphatic, three-dimensional form, the dark mass on a background of bright greys, give this oil-painting a quality that recalls certain paintings by Cezanne."
Reference: Gila Ballas, Ilana Tenenbaum, and Yael Lotan (curators and eds.), "Social Realism in the 50's, Political Art in the 90's, " exhibition catalogue, Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa, 1998, Hebrew and English (p. 156; p. 89, no. 8).
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $600
Including buyer's premium
Aviva Uri (1922-1989), Untitled. Charcoal on paper. Signed. 15X16 cm. Framed, 36X37.5 cm with frame. Minor creases and blemishes.
Aviva Uri (1922-1989), painter and graphic artist, native of Safed. Studied painting under Moshe Castel and David Hendler; eventually married the latter. Began exhibiting at various venues already in her early active years, quickly attaining prominence in the local art scene. Awarded the Dizengoff Prize for Painting and Sculpture in 1952. Her work consistently developed over the years, moving progressively from figurative to abstract. A dominant feature of her oeuvre is "[…] delicate sketching, based in its process on building and relieving tension, relaxing the hand and blocking it, [applying] pressure and hovering, imperviousness and airiness, boldness and softness […], a magnetic field, that builds inside itself the nervous currents of life" (Benjamin Tammuz, Dorith LeVite and Gideon Ofrath, "The Story of Art in Israel, " 1980). Many of the artists of the next generation – including Raffi Lavie, Moshe Gershuni, and others – were profoundly influenced by her work.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Lea Nikel / Maya Bejerano, Poems. Jerusalem: Museum prints of the Israel Museum, 1988. Portfolio comprising eight lithographs by Lea Nikel and seven poems by Maya Bejerano, printed on tracing paper. No. 19 of 44. The lithographs are numbered, signed, and dated 1987. Artist's Notebook no. 18 of the Israel Museum series.
Lea Nikel (1918-2005) was born in Zhitomir (Zhytomyr), Ukraine, and immigrated to Palestine with her family in 1920. Her first steps in the art of painting were taken at the age of 16, studying under the painter Chaim Gliksberg. Later she was taught by Yehezkel Streichman and Avigdor Stematsky. Nikel spent the years 1950 to 1961 in Paris, where she was introduced to the style of abstract painting known as Tachisme, which involves spray-painting, among other things. In general, her work became gradually more abstract. In 1957, Nikel underwent surgery to treat a hemorrhage, and lost her vision almost entirely in the process. That did not stop her from continuing her art career. She stood out as an artist who defied categorization, and persisted with the unique style of abstraction she had developed, even as artistic styles in Israel were moving in other directions. The Israel Museum awarded Nikel the Sandberg Prize for Israeli Art in 1972. She went on to win the Dizengoff Prize in 1982, and, alongside Menashe Kadishman, the Israel Prize for Painting in 1995.
39X29 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and tears to paper cover.
Provenance: the Uzi Agassi collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $475
Including buyer's premium
Lea Nikel (1918-2005), Untitled, 1997. Oil pastel on paper. Signed and dated. 18X34.5 cm.
Lea Nikel (1918-2005) was born in Zhitomir (Zhytomyr), Ukraine, and immigrated to Palestine with her family in 1920. Her first steps in the art of painting were taken at the age of 16, studying under the painter Chaim Gliksberg. Later she was taught by Yehezkel Streichman and Avigdor Stematsky. Nikel spent the years 1950 to 1961 in Paris, where she was introduced to the style of abstract painting known as Tachisme, and her work became gradually more abstract. In 1957, Nikel underwent surgery to treat a hemorrhage, and lost her vision almost entirely in the process. That did not stop her from continuing her art career. She stood out as an artist who defied categorization, and persisted with the unique style of abstraction she had developed, even as artistic styles in Israel were moving in other directions. The Israel Museum awarded Nikel the Sandberg Prize for Israeli Art in 1972. She went on to win the Dizengoff Prize in 1982, and, alongside Menashe Kadishman, the Israel Prize for Painting in 1995.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $400
Sold for: $750
Including buyer's premium
Pinchas Cohen Gan (b. 1942), from the series "Confrontations of Formula and Painting", 1982. Acrylic and pencil on paper. Signed and dated. 100X70 cm. Fair-good condition. Considerable foxing to lower part of the work. Several small tears and holes to margins.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $1,000
Sold for: $4,500
Including buyer's premium
Tsibi Geva (b. 1951), Umm al-Fahm, 1984. Diptych. Mixed media on thin cardboard. Signed and dated. 200X70 cm. Good condition. Small holes and minor blemishes.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Yona Fischer : Do the names of places you choose always have political connotations for you, or do they sometimes have poetic connotations? Tsibi Geva : I think about it in terms of a political haiku. The musicality, the reverberations, too, are content in the world. The names generate a frequency that has an origin and a resonance, or impact. They are linguistic, musical, conceptual and political elements that accumulates – first in me, and then in the works. I like this sort of concatenated thought, the idea that to a great extent the deeper meanings of what you're doing can only be revealed through an observation of the entire project, not by single pieces. A project is also a projection. A single piece is like a single word in a sentence or story. There's a fundamental difference between a painting of a terrazzo tile and tiling, if you will, or occupying a territory, territorialization. Already at a very early stage in my career, in the series of works that includes Umm el-Fahem and Biladi Biladi (1983-85) I thought that such works, in which the inscribed words are a key image, may work on their own, but when you stand in a space that's completely surrounded by names of Arab places written in Hebrew, it becomes a whole sphere and generates a reference field that is charged with meaning. As a viewer, you find yourself "confined" in a suggestive electricity field. Pointing at invisible villages is an act of indicating and focusing, bringing them to the foreground and defining an alternative territory to that of the Zionist narrative, to this story we were raised on. This act also defines itself along the time axis. Things have added up, have been built one on top of the other, very slowly. Tsibi Geva in Conversation with Yona Fischer. From: Tsibi Geva: Transition, Object, exhibition catalog, Ashdod Museum of Art (curated by Yona Fischer and Roni Cohen-Binyamini), July-November 2012. pp xiii-xiv.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $163
Including buyer's premium
Ran Hadari (b. 1962), Landscape, 1986. Oil on paper. Signed and dated. 25.5X38. Minor holes and tears (some open) to edges.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $125
Including buyer's premium
Ran Hadari (b. 1962), Portrait. Paris, 1987. Gouache on paper. Signed and dated. Approx. 24X16 cm.
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Ran Hadari (b. 1962), Wash Basin. 1986. Oil on canvas. Signed and dated. Canvas: 39X53 cm. Not framed. Holes and stains to canvas margins (around the painting).
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $175
Including buyer's premium
Pamela Levy (1949-2004), Girl Eating a Peach, 1997. Woodcut. Signed, dated and numbered 1/4. 57X50 cm.
Pamela Levy (1949-2004) was born in Fairfield, Iowa. She studied at the University of Northern Iowa, and later joined an artists commune in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In 1976 she immigrated to Israel. Her early works were textile collages inspired by the feminist Pattern and Decoration art movement. In the 1980s she started to experiment with other techniques, painting figurative scenes in oil, based on photographs (some of which she herself took), and creating woodcuts and silkscreens, always retaining a collage-like, patchwork quality. Levy's works deal with feminist and political issues, "her oil paintings are made as collages featuring naked and clothed figures in deserted urban spaces, building sites or on the beach. They are psychologically charged, saturated with tension and contrasts between fear and delight, childhood and old age, complete and ripped, violent and merciful" (exhibition statement – retrospective of Levy's work at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 2018).
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $213
Including buyer's premium
Pamela Levy (1949-2004), Girl Brushing Her Hair, 1997. Woodcut. Signed and dated, marked AP. 67X64.5 cm.
Pamela Levy (1949-2004) was born in Fairfield, Iowa. She studied at the University of Northern Iowa, and later joined an artists commune in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In 1976 she immigrated to Israel. Her early works were textile collages inspired by the feminist Pattern and Decoration art movement. In the 1980s she started to experiment with other techniques, painting figurative scenes in oil, based on photographs (some of which she herself took), and creating woodcuts and silkscreens, always retaining a collage-like, patchwork quality. Levy's works deal with feminist and political issues, "her oil paintings are made as collages featuring naked and clothed figures in deserted urban spaces, building sites or on the beach. They are psychologically charged, saturated with tension and contrasts between fear and delight, childhood and old age, complete and ripped, violent and merciful" (exhibition statement – retrospective of Levy's work at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 2018).
Provenance: The Uzi Agassi Collection.
Category
Art – Old Masters, European and Israeli Art
Catalogue