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Shmuel Raayoni

Shmuel Raayoni (May 4, 1905 – December 22, 1995) (Hebrew: שמואל רעיוני) was an Israeli painter, member of New Horizons, teacher and educator and founding member of Ein-Hod Artist Village.

Shmuel Raayoni
Shmuel Raayoni in his studio, 1968
Born
Shmuel Maslovati

(1905-05-04)May 4, 1905
Žiežmariai, Russian Empire
DiedDecember 22, 1995(1995-12-22) (aged 90)
Ein-Hod, Israel
NationalityIsraeli
EducationBezalel School of Arts and Crafts
MovementLyric Abstract, Ofakim Hadashim, Action Painting, Cubism
SpouseElla Raayoni (ne: Ella Bartler)

Biography edit

Shmuel Raayoni was born as Shmuel Maslovati in 1905 to a Zionist family in Žiežmariai – a town near Kaunas, then the capital of Lithuania. Encouraged by Boris Schatz, the founder of Bezalel, Raayoni immigrated to Palestine, alone, in 1923 and enrolled in the Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts. During those years, Aharon Avni, Arie Aroch, Moshe Castel Yehezkel Streichman, Avigdor Stematsky, and Zeev Ben-Zvi, studied there as well.[1]

In 1927, Raayoni completed his studies at Bezalel[2] and moved to the town of Petach Tikva where he worked at odd jobs, including teaching of painting. Among his students at that time was the painter Shlomo Eliraz.[3]

In 1931, he moved to Haifa, where he began teaching painting at Bialik High School and later on at a teacher's seminar. In 1935 he married his former student, Ella Brettler, who later became a fabric collage artist. He changed his name to Raayoni around that period.

In 1939, at the same time he was teaching, Raayoni started to study architecture an engineering at the British Institute for Engineering Technology. Raayoni received his degree in Architecture and Engineering in 1945. He joined the General Union of Painters and Sculptors in Palestine in 1947, and immediately thereafter traveled, for the first time, to Paris. He studied at the Académie Julian, a private art school, where many foreign artists studied, since they were not required to take French language examinations. In 1955, Raayoni returned to Paris – this time enrolling at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and subsequently he traveled to Italy.

Raayoni joined the Ofakim Hadashim group in 1952 where he became an active member.[4] He participated in all the group's exhibitions, except the exhibition in Ein Harod Museum in July 1963. In 1953 he represented Israel at the Bienal in São Paulo, Brazil [5] and in the Autumn Salon in Paris in 1958. Raayoni exhibited in Israel and abroad on occasion with his wife, the artist Ella Raayoni.

In 1953 Raayoni joined, as founding member, the artist village of Ein-Hod,[6] where he lived with his family until his passing away in 1995.

Raayoni’s work edit

Raayoni's early paintings, immediately after his graduation from Bezalel, are figurative, expressionistic and influenced by the European art of the period. Upon his return from Paris, he shows an exhibition of Paris and Haifa, his then home town, in watercolors making use of his famous bright colors and the Israeli light.[7] The lessons that Raayoni learned from Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso, and Georges Rouault began to be apparent in his paintings.[8] In the early 60's Raayoni started painting what was later coined as “lyric abstract”. He was also experimenting with a derivative of Action Painting, a painting technique introduced by the American painter Jackson Pollock. In this technique, an image is created by body movements without rational control. In the 70's and 80's came his “white period”. Raayoni created a series of scenery painting based on the landscapes of the Negev.[9] In many of these paintings clusters of figures appear, serving as metaphor to the emotional world he wanted to represent. In later years his paintings were based on his impressions from his visit to the city of Goslar, Germany. In his late life he focused on painting figures.

Raayoni's body of work shifts between a variety of styles and techniques. Initially, as Batia Donner mentioned in her article about Raayoni, "it seemed to chart an evolutionary process that echoes cultural phenomena and trends that occurred at the heart of the Israeli art scene. However, at a certain moment, his paintings began to flit stylistically back and forth along the time axis, as he tried to identify the precise gesture that may best fit the meaning he sought to express"[10]

Awards and prizes edit

  • 1948 - Herman Struck Award, Haifa Municipality
  • 1958 - Malach Prize for print
  • 1947 - First solo exhibition in Haifa
  • 1949, 1953, 1955 - Artists House Haifa
  • 1956, 1958 - Ein-Hod Art Gallery
  • 1957 - Chagall House Haifa
  • 1958 - Artists House Jerusalem
  • 1958 - Marcel Bernheim Gallery Paris
  • 1961 - Gallery 220 and Yehudit Gallery
  • 1962 – El Paso Art Museum, Texas USA
  • 1965 – Contemporary Art Museum Haifa
  • 1965 - Woodstock Gallery London Great Britain
  • 1965 - Jewish Community Center, Bridgeport, Connecticut, USA (together with his wife, Ella Raayoni)
  • 1966, 1969, 1975,1979 - Nora Gallery Jerusalem
  • 1967 – Yad Labanim Rechovot (together with his wife, Ella Raayoni)
  • 1967 – Beit Haam Beer Sheva (together with his wife, Ella Raayoni)
  • 1968 – Batte Wage Gallery Bazel, Switzerland
  • 1969 - People in the Landscape, Aquarelle
  • 1969 - 1977 Exhibitions in the US and Canada
  • 1977 - Jewish Museum, Berkeley, California, USA
  • 1980 - Yares Gallery Scottsdale, Arizona, USA (together with his wife, Ella Raayoni)
  • 1983 - Chagall House, Association of Painters & Sculptors in Haifa
  • 1984 - Portraits in Aquarelle, Nora Gallery Jerusalem
  • 1990 - Human Faces, Ein-Hod Artist House
  • 1992 - Flip it up flip it down, The Janco-dada Museum in Ein-Hod (together with his wife, Ella Raayoni)
  • 1994, 2017 - Ein-Hod Art Gallery
  • 2019 - Kfar Saba Municipal Gallery

Biennial and group exhibitions edit

  • 1953 - Biennial in São Paulo, Brazil
  • 1958 - Autumn Salon, Paris France
  • 1978 - Paintings from Israel, Artist Association House Paderborn, Germany
  • 1987 - Israeli Art from Ein-Hod and Tel-Aviv, The Electorate of Trier, Germany

Additional reading edit

  • Ballas, Gila, New Horizons: The Birth of Abstraction in Israeli Art (Papyrus Publishing, Tel Aviv 1980, additional extended Edition: Modan Publishing, Ben Shemen 2014)

( Avniel, M., Hoenich, P.K. and Pomrok, M.B, Fifty Artists, Masada Press Ltd.

External links edit

  • Shmuel Raayoni, Information Center for Israeli Art.

References edit

  1. ^ Yona Fischer, Streichman, Tel Aviv, The Israeli Phoenix and the Estate of Yehezkel Streichman, 1997, pp. 34.
  2. ^ Tartakover, David and Ofret, Gideon, Bezalel 100, First Book 1904-1929, Mifal Hapais, 2006, pp. 117.
  3. ^ The Information Center for Israeli Art under “Shlomo Eliraz"
  4. ^ Ballas, Gila New Horizons: The Birth of Abstraction in Israeli Art, Modan Publishing, Ben Shemen 2014 pg. 314
  5. ^ 2ª Bienal de São Paulo (1953), pp. 209-210 “Catálogo da Bienal São Paulo” retrieved from pp. 209-210
  6. ^ In his book about Ein Hod, Norman Lewis dedicated a poem to Shmuel Raayoni. Lewis, Norman, "ein hod", by Norman Lewis, 1964 pp. 62.
  7. ^ The Palestine Post critic is taken by the "spontaneous subjectivity which appear free of preconceived ideas". H. “S. Raayoni's Water Colours” the Palestine Post, October 07, 1947 pp. 4.
  8. ^ Raayoni was not the only Israeli painter to adopt the “Picasso Language” Aharon Kahana, Pinchas Abramovich, Streichman and Stematsky did it. Gideon Ofrat, Aharon Kahana: Monography (B) Synthetic cubist abstract” The Storage of Gideon Ofrat Text Archive.
  9. ^ Museum Dada in Ein-Hod showed a large exhibition of these paintings in 1990. The” White Period is mentioned in Gili Dinstein-Yashpeh article about Raayoni, “The Last Bohemian,” Maariv, August 15, 1990 pp. 21.
  10. ^ Donner, Batia, "Shmuel Raayoni: Between History and Style", Catalogue, Shmuel Raayoni: Israeli Painter, City Gallery Kfar Saba, 2018 Pg. 44-45

shmuel, raayoni, 1905, december, 1995, hebrew, שמואל, רעיוני, israeli, painter, member, horizons, teacher, educator, founding, member, artist, village, studio, 1968bornshmuel, maslovati, 1905, 1905Žiežmariai, russian, empiredieddecember, 1995, 1995, aged, isra. Shmuel Raayoni May 4 1905 December 22 1995 Hebrew שמואל רעיוני was an Israeli painter member of New Horizons teacher and educator and founding member of Ein Hod Artist Village Shmuel RaayoniShmuel Raayoni in his studio 1968BornShmuel Maslovati 1905 05 04 May 4 1905Ziezmariai Russian EmpireDiedDecember 22 1995 1995 12 22 aged 90 Ein Hod IsraelNationalityIsraeliEducationBezalel School of Arts and CraftsMovementLyric Abstract Ofakim Hadashim Action Painting CubismSpouseElla Raayoni ne Ella Bartler Contents 1 Biography 2 Raayoni s work 3 Awards and prizes 4 Biennial and group exhibitions 5 Additional reading 6 External links 7 ReferencesBiography editShmuel Raayoni was born as Shmuel Maslovati in 1905 to a Zionist family in Ziezmariai a town near Kaunas then the capital of Lithuania Encouraged by Boris Schatz the founder of Bezalel Raayoni immigrated to Palestine alone in 1923 and enrolled in the Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts During those years Aharon Avni Arie Aroch Moshe Castel Yehezkel Streichman Avigdor Stematsky and Zeev Ben Zvi studied there as well 1 In 1927 Raayoni completed his studies at Bezalel 2 and moved to the town of Petach Tikva where he worked at odd jobs including teaching of painting Among his students at that time was the painter Shlomo Eliraz 3 In 1931 he moved to Haifa where he began teaching painting at Bialik High School and later on at a teacher s seminar In 1935 he married his former student Ella Brettler who later became a fabric collage artist He changed his name to Raayoni around that period In 1939 at the same time he was teaching Raayoni started to study architecture an engineering at the British Institute for Engineering Technology Raayoni received his degree in Architecture and Engineering in 1945 He joined the General Union of Painters and Sculptors in Palestine in 1947 and immediately thereafter traveled for the first time to Paris He studied at the Academie Julian a private art school where many foreign artists studied since they were not required to take French language examinations In 1955 Raayoni returned to Paris this time enrolling at the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere and subsequently he traveled to Italy Raayoni joined the Ofakim Hadashim group in 1952 where he became an active member 4 He participated in all the group s exhibitions except the exhibition in Ein Harod Museum in July 1963 In 1953 he represented Israel at the Bienal in Sao Paulo Brazil 5 and in the Autumn Salon in Paris in 1958 Raayoni exhibited in Israel and abroad on occasion with his wife the artist Ella Raayoni In 1953 Raayoni joined as founding member the artist village of Ein Hod 6 where he lived with his family until his passing away in 1995 Raayoni s work editRaayoni s early paintings immediately after his graduation from Bezalel are figurative expressionistic and influenced by the European art of the period Upon his return from Paris he shows an exhibition of Paris and Haifa his then home town in watercolors making use of his famous bright colors and the Israeli light 7 The lessons that Raayoni learned from Georges Braque Pablo Picasso and Georges Rouault began to be apparent in his paintings 8 In the early 60 s Raayoni started painting what was later coined as lyric abstract He was also experimenting with a derivative of Action Painting a painting technique introduced by the American painter Jackson Pollock In this technique an image is created by body movements without rational control In the 70 s and 80 s came his white period Raayoni created a series of scenery painting based on the landscapes of the Negev 9 In many of these paintings clusters of figures appear serving as metaphor to the emotional world he wanted to represent In later years his paintings were based on his impressions from his visit to the city of Goslar Germany In his late life he focused on painting figures Raayoni s body of work shifts between a variety of styles and techniques Initially as Batia Donner mentioned in her article about Raayoni it seemed to chart an evolutionary process that echoes cultural phenomena and trends that occurred at the heart of the Israeli art scene However at a certain moment his paintings began to flit stylistically back and forth along the time axis as he tried to identify the precise gesture that may best fit the meaning he sought to express 10 Awards and prizes edit1948 Herman Struck Award Haifa Municipality 1958 Malach Prize for print 1947 First solo exhibition in Haifa 1949 1953 1955 Artists House Haifa 1956 1958 Ein Hod Art Gallery 1957 Chagall House Haifa 1958 Artists House Jerusalem 1958 Marcel Bernheim Gallery Paris 1961 Gallery 220 and Yehudit Gallery 1962 El Paso Art Museum Texas USA 1965 Contemporary Art Museum Haifa 1965 Woodstock Gallery London Great Britain 1965 Jewish Community Center Bridgeport Connecticut USA together with his wife Ella Raayoni 1966 1969 1975 1979 Nora Gallery Jerusalem 1967 Yad Labanim Rechovot together with his wife Ella Raayoni 1967 Beit Haam Beer Sheva together with his wife Ella Raayoni 1968 Batte Wage Gallery Bazel Switzerland 1969 People in the Landscape Aquarelle 1969 1977 Exhibitions in the US and Canada 1977 Jewish Museum Berkeley California USA 1980 Yares Gallery Scottsdale Arizona USA together with his wife Ella Raayoni 1983 Chagall House Association of Painters amp Sculptors in Haifa 1984 Portraits in Aquarelle Nora Gallery Jerusalem 1990 Human Faces Ein Hod Artist House 1992 Flip it up flip it down The Janco dada Museum in Ein Hod together with his wife Ella Raayoni 1994 2017 Ein Hod Art Gallery 2019 Kfar Saba Municipal GalleryBiennial and group exhibitions edit1953 Biennial in Sao Paulo Brazil 1958 Autumn Salon Paris France 1978 Paintings from Israel Artist Association House Paderborn Germany 1987 Israeli Art from Ein Hod and Tel Aviv The Electorate of Trier GermanyAdditional reading editBallas Gila New Horizons The Birth of Abstraction in Israeli Art Papyrus Publishing Tel Aviv 1980 additional extended Edition Modan Publishing Ben Shemen 2014 Avniel M Hoenich P K and Pomrok M B Fifty Artists Masada Press Ltd External links editShmuel Raayoni Information Center for Israeli Art References edit Yona Fischer Streichman Tel Aviv The Israeli Phoenix and the Estate of Yehezkel Streichman 1997 pp 34 Tartakover David and Ofret Gideon Bezalel 100 First Book 1904 1929 Mifal Hapais 2006 pp 117 The Information Center for Israeli Art under Shlomo Eliraz Ballas Gila New Horizons The Birth of Abstraction in Israeli Art Modan Publishing Ben Shemen 2014 pg 314 2ª Bienal de Sao Paulo 1953 pp 209 210 Catalogo da Bienal Sao Paulo retrieved from pp 209 210 In his book about Ein Hod Norman Lewis dedicated a poem to Shmuel Raayoni Lewis Norman ein hod by Norman Lewis 1964 pp 62 The Palestine Post critic is taken by the spontaneous subjectivity which appear free of preconceived ideas H S Raayoni s Water Colours the Palestine Post October 07 1947 pp 4 Raayoni was not the only Israeli painter to adopt the Picasso Language Aharon Kahana Pinchas Abramovich Streichman and Stematsky did it Gideon Ofrat Aharon Kahana Monography B Synthetic cubist abstract The Storage of Gideon Ofrat Text Archive Museum Dada in Ein Hod showed a large exhibition of these paintings in 1990 The White Period is mentioned in Gili Dinstein Yashpeh article about Raayoni The Last Bohemian Maariv August 15 1990 pp 21 Donner Batia Shmuel Raayoni Between History and Style Catalogue Shmuel Raayoni Israeli Painter City Gallery Kfar Saba 2018 Pg 44 45 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shmuel Raayoni amp oldid 1185141093, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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