Gavra Mandil

Gavra Mandil (1936 - 2006) was a Yugoslavian born Israeli photographer and educator, one of the first photographers of advertising and fashion in Israel, chairman of the Photographers Association, a photography teacher, founder of the Studio Gavra School of Photography.

Gavra Mandil
Born
NationalityIsrael
Known forphotography

Biography

Gavra Mandil was born in 1936 in Belgrade to a family of photographers. His grandfather Gavra Confino, the father of his mother, was the court photographer of the king of Yugoslavia, and his father, Moshe, was a well-known photographer with a photography studio in Novi Sad, where the family moved. With the beginning of the Nazi occupation, the family was evacuated from Yugoslavia, when the family's photographic talent and daring saved them time after time from death. After many incarnations, the family fled to Albania, where they were hidden until the end of the war by Refik Veseli, one of the father's assistants, at his parents' home in the mountains. For this he and his family won the title of Righteous Among the Nations.[1][2][3][4][5]

After the war the Mandil family returned to Yugoslavia, and in 1949 immigrated to Israel. The family settled in Haifa, where Moshe opened Talpiot. In spite of the difficulties of absorption in Israel, Gever quickly became involved with his peers, joined the Scout movement, guided it, and joined the Nahal Brigade, like his other comrades, participated in the Sinai War and returned to Kibbutz Katzir.

Although he did not plan to continue his family tradition in photography, he found himself caught up by the new developments in the world of photography abroad, completing his bachelor's degree in England and passing the rigorous examinations of the Association of Professional Photographers. Who graduated from photography schools from all over England, and worked for the best photographers in London and acquired a lot of experience during his visit to Israel, where he married Naomi, his former student, and the couple returned to England and stayed there until the end of their studies and work.

Gavra returned to Israel in 1962 and opened the Gavra Studio for commercial, fashion and industrial photography at 24 Avoda Street in Tel Aviv. Almost all the other photographers were photo photographers, like his father, who took pictures of everything - events, weddings, advertisements, and fashion photography. Gavra created the demand for professional and high-quality photographs, as was seen at the time in foreign magazines, and was a full partner in setting the concept, styling, casting and choosing the photography sites, El-Al, the government offices, the big banks, Mifal Hapayis, Amcor, Tadiran, etc. He photographed the beauty and celebrity queens of the 1960s and 1970s to my hair for women and the singers and bands of Hed Arzi's record labels. Leitersdorf in Maskit, Gideon Oberson, Gottex, Diva and Ata. In 1969 he founded the Israeli Association of Photographers and Industry. In 1979 he joined the Association of Professional Photographers and in 1985 was elected President.

Gavra died in February 2006, in the midst of work on his second book, which was supposed to be a reference book for photography combined with examples and personal stories.

Studio Gavra School of Photography

Since 1974, Gavra Mandil began teaching at the high schools of photography - Bezalel Academy, Hadassah Academic College and Ono Academic College. He transformed his studio on 24 Ha'avoda Street to a photography school based on a model he had learned in the United States.[6] The Gavra Studio continues to operate as a unique school of professional photography under the management of the Gavra's children, Ruti Mandil-Halabi and Ron Mandil.[7][8]

gollark: Increasingly, people seem to want their preferred laws to be enforced at the federal level, probably because something something internet something something greater visibility of further away regions of the country.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wickard_v._Filburn
gollark: Is it *that* restricted? Apparently there was a thing where it was *somehow* ruled that feeding animals things was "interstate commerce" and thus federally controlled.
gollark: States set their own laws in some things, the central government sets laws for other things.
gollark: I have a rough idea.

References

  1. The Path of the Righteous: Gentile Rescuers of Jews During the Holocaust, By Mordecai Paldiel, 1993, ISBN 978-0881253764, pages 336-337
  2. Saving the Jews: Amazing Stories of Men and Women who Defied the Final Solution, By Mordecai Paldiel, 2000, ISBN 978-1887563550, pages 111-113
  3. Resisting the Holocaust: Upstanders, Partisans, and Survivors , ISBN 978-1610698788, Paul R. Bartrop, pages 295-297
  4. The Story Behind The Zookeeper's Wife and 5 Other Little-Known Holocaust Heroes, Time, Olivia B. Waxman, 31 March 2017
  5. Remembering an earlier refugee crisis, and a family who risked their lives to help, Washington Post, 23 April 2017
  6. Aderet, Ofer (2014-10-26). "Gavra Mandil". haaretz.com. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  7. "Sharon Stern, B.H. from Studio Gavra will guide "Man and Nature – a Photography Workshop in the Timna Landscape". General manager of Gavra Ron Mandil will join the jury team". planetarava.com. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  8. "Studio Gavra - exhibitions". haaretz.co.il. Retrieved 2018-10-22.
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