Larry Abramson

Larry Abramson (Hebrew: לארי אברמסון; born 1954) is a South African-born Israeli artist.

Larry Abramson
Larry Abramson, 2005
Born1954
South Africa
NationalityIsraeli, Jewish
EducationChelsea College of Art and Design
Known forPainting
Notable work
Hevel (1989–1990)
MovementIsraeli art

Biography

Larry Abramson was born in 1954 in South Africa.[1] In 1961, his family immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem. In 1970, as a high school senior, he was one of the signators of a conscientious objectors to Israeli rejection of Egyptian President Nasser's peace initiative. In 1973 Abramson studied a Foundation Course at the Chelsea College of Art and Design, London. Upon his return to Israel he took a position as printer and curator of exhibitions at the Jerusalem Print Workshop, where he worked for nine years, until 1986.

Art career

Abramson's first solo exhibition was in 1975. His work during the 1980s dealt with a variety of iconic symbols from modernist European art, particularly the "Black Square" by Kazimir Malevich, which he used to create dynamic situations combining abstraction and a figurative art idiom.

During 1993 and 1994 Abramson created the series of work "tsooba," which was exhibited at the Kibbutz Art Gallery, Tel Aviv. The series was composed of 38 landscape paintings (oil on canvas), 38 impressions on newspaper of the landscape paintings, and a group of still life paintings after samples of flora taken from the site.

This series relates to a mound of ruins near Kibbutz Tzova, a site which was painted a decade earlier by the artist Joseph Zaritsky. While Zaritsky ignored the Palestinian ruins found on the site and thus abstracted the landscape, Abramson painted the view realistically and then defaced it. By "seeing" the ruins of the Palestinian village, he criticizes the Israeli point of view which seeks to erase the Palestinian identity from the appropriated territory.[2]

In 1984, Abramson joined the teaching staff of the art department of the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design in Jerusalem. In 1992 he was appointed head of the Fine Art department, and in 1996 he founded and headed the Bezalel Program for Young Artists (Master of Fine Art).

In 2000 and 2003 he was invited as guest lecturer at the San Francisco Art Institute, and in 2002 he joined the academic team planning the establishment of a new art department at the Shenkar College of Engineering and Design in Ramat Gan, Israel.

In May 2002 Abramson published in the journal Studio an article entitled "We Are All Felix Nussbaum", in which he raised the problematic relationship between art and history in the post-Holocaust era.

In 2005 Abramson mounted an exhibition of works under the name "The Pile" which included charcoal drawings of piles of construction debris, relating to the issue of representation of ruins in art and the figure of Jewish-German painter Felix Nussbaum. This series was exhibited at the Felix Nussbaum Haus Museum in Osnabrück, (Germany) and at the Chaim Atar Museum of Art on Kibbutz Ein Harod in the Jezreel Valley.

In 2007 Abramson held an exhibition of recent paintings at the Gordon Gallery in Tel Aviv, and in 2010 an extensive retrospective exhibition of his work was held at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.

Awards and recognition

gollark: Differentiate it, substitute x=3 into that, set dy/dx to 0, solve.
gollark: Oh, actually just > 0 since it's a denominator, yes.
gollark: The $9-x^2$ bit has to have a value >= 0. So solve that and work out for which values it is >= 0.
gollark: You want the bit in the square root to be greater than or equal to 0, so just figure out what values of x give you that.
gollark: I see.

See also

Visual arts in Israel

References

  1. "Larry Abramson". Information Center for Israeli Art. Israel Museum. Retrieved 29 September 2011.
  2. Levine, Angela (6 November 1998). "Lessons in seeing". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved 20 September 2011.



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