Hillel Roman

Hillel Roman (הלל רומן) is a visual artist living and working in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Untitled by Hillel Roman, 2005
Permanent collection, Tel Aviv Museum

Biography

Roman was born on April 16, 1975 in Los Angeles, California. At age 24 he joined Hamidrasha Art School, Beit Berl College, Israel. In 2004 Roman graduated from Tel-Aviv University, the Department for Poetics and Comparative Literature (magna cum laude), and in 2007 he received his Masters of Fine Arts from Goldsmiths College, University of London.

Roman employs a wide range of techniques, from drawing, painting and conceptual art, through sculpting and etching, to building fully functional astronomical observatories.

After his graduation from Beit Berl college, he assumed a teaching position there, and in the years 2004-2006 he lectured at Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv. After having returned from his studies in London, he resumed his position at Beit Berl, and also accepted a teaching role at Thelma Yellin school of Fine Arts.

In 2007, Roman received a residency grant at Cite Internationale des Arts, Paris, France. In 2009, he won the Young Artist Prize from the Ministry of culture, Israel. The judging committee said about him: "Roman's paintings, drawings and etchings, always beautiful and saturated... more than intending to delegate a (renewed) birth of beauty out of the banal, replicated and ordinary, they wish to confront the postmodern spectator with the question 'what is modern painting'..."[1]

In an interview with curator Orit Bulgaro in the catalog of Idiolect, an exhibition at the Bat Yam Museum of Contemporary Art in 2009, Roman discussed "...the significance of the concrete versus the metaphorical, the human desire to get through the metaphor and to touch, the vain struggle to bridge the distance between the eye and the hand. Maybe that is the privilege of the painter/sculptor, and the source of his relevance, despite it all. In any case, I try to create objects or paintings that exist in that chasm between the concrete and the metaphorical; perhaps that is my way of trying to avoid filling any role."[2]

Solo exhibitions

"Observatory" by Hillel Roman, installed at 2nd Herzliya Biennial, Israel 2009
  • 2009 Kingdom, Bat-Yam Museum of Art, curator: Orit Bulgaro
  • 2009 Observatory, 2nd Herzliya Biennial, curators: Picnic Magazine
  • 2006 Stronghold, Tel Aviv Artists' Studios
  • 2005 Occasional Goods, Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 2002 Darkling, Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv

Group Shows

  • 2009 The rings of Saturn, Dvir Gallery, Tel-Aviv
  • 2009 Flakes, Center for Contemporary Art Tel-Aviv, Curator: Efrat Gal
  • 2009 Hulululu, P8 Gallery, Tel-Aviv, Curator: Rakefet Wiener-Omer
  • 2008 Neues Sehen - Young Art from Israel, Städtische Galerie Bremen, Germany (catalog)
  • 2008 Ksharim ve'Heksherim (connections and contexts) from the Beno Kalev collection, Tefen Museum of Art (catalog)
  • 2008 Visits to (Some)Where: Recent Art from Israel (& Poland), Galeria BWA Zielona-Gora Poland, Curator: Adi Englman
  • 2007 Reshamim III The Third Jerusalem Drawing Biennial, curator: Dalia Manor (catalog)
  • 2007 Digital Landscapes, Curator: Irit Tal, Tel-Aviv University Gallery (catalog)
  • 2007 Come Thou Beauty, Haifa University gallery, Curator: Ruti Direktor (catalog)
  • 2004 Art for an Alternative Society, Markaz al-Baqaa, Jaffa
  • 2004 Rose c'est la vie – On Flowers in Contemporary Art, Tel-Aviv Museum of Art, Curator: Edna Moshenson (catalog)
  • 2004 A Point of View Tel-Aviv Museum of Art, Curator: Ellen Ginton (catalog)
  • 2003 Young Israeli Art - The Jacques and Eugenie O'Hana Collection, Tel-Aviv Museum of Art (catalog)
  • 2003 Realism and a Diagonal – Eldar Farber and Hillel Roman Guest Artist Gallery, Hamidrasha Art School, Curator: Jacob Mishori
  • 2003 A Stage against the War – Artists against the war in Iraq, Markaz al-Baqaa Jaffa
  • 2003 Group Exhibition, Dvir Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 2003 Hamidrasha Gallery, Tel Aviv, Curator: Doron Rabina
  • 2002 Imagine - Artists for co-existence, Umm El Fahim Art Gallery
  • 2002 Two plus Two, Pyramid Center for Contemporary Art, Haifa, Curator: Philip Renzer
gollark: Wait, are they applying this to laptops too?
gollark: Phones and such.
gollark: Lots of devices only have one port though.
gollark: They're increasingly moving onto the same port. USB-C does video, peripherals and power nowadays.
gollark: Legislation inevitably takes ages. Stuff would be stuck on a worse standard.

References

  1. Israel Ministry of culture, Announcing winners of 2009 Young Artists prize
  2. Idiolect catalog, Bat Yam Museum of Contemporary Art, 2009
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