Jerusalem Artists House

Jerusalem Artists House is an Israeli art gallery and exhibition space in Jerusalem, Israel that housed the Bezalel Art School, established in 1906. The historic 19th century building, in Jerusalem's Rehavia neighborhood, was the home of Boris Schatz, who opened an art school and museum alongside his family residence. The building is now the headquarters of the Jerusalem Association of Painters and Sculptors.

Jerusalem Artists House
Jerusalem Artists House,2011
Established1906
LocationJerusalem, Israel
TypeArt and history
Websitehttp://www.art.org.il/he/index.php

History

Bezalel Art School, 1913

Built by a wealthy Arab in the 1880s, with a crenelated stone wall mirroring the wall around Jerusalem's Old City, the building stood empty until 1907, when the complex was purchased by the Jewish National Fund for Boris Dov Schatz, who envisioned opening an art school there.[1] The building became the country's first public museum. Schatz's collection later formed the basis of the Israel Museum, which opened in 1965.[2]

The Jerusalem Artists House mounts changing exhibitions of Israeli art, featuring the work of both new and established artists. Since 2001 the Biennale for Drawing in Israel has been held there.[3]

In May 2019, the Larva Society for Psychical Research relocated temporarily to the Jerusalem Artists House.

gollark: I would start by establishing a numbering/encoding system by sending Fibonacci or whatever, then defining (through examples, probably) arithmetic operations, and then... it might be hard to relate physical information actually, hm.
gollark: It's pictographic, except bad.
gollark: I would probably *not* do it this way, but it's a start.
gollark: Presumably, an entire civilization working on it might come up with some sensible interpretations.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arecibo_message

See also

  • List of museums in Israel

References

  1. Artistic flavor, Jerusalem Post
  2. "Jerusalem Artists House". art.org.il. Jerusalem Artists House. Retrieved 14 May 2015.
  3. The Biennale for Drawing in Israel Archived 2015-12-10 at the Wayback Machine

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