释义 |
- Awards
- Exhibitions
- References
- External Links
{{Infobox person | name = Batia Grossbard | birth_date = April 14, 1910 | birth_place = Ostrow, Poland | death_date = August 11, 1995 (85) | death_place = Haifa, Israel | residence = Haifa, Israel | alma_mater = Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts | occupation = Artist | style = Abstract Expressionism | spouse = Yehoshua Grossbard (Vielke Broda) | children = Mira Baron | parents = Eliyahu Gershon Freidkes Simchoni and Golda Rajza Freidkes | awards = Herman Struck Prize, Haifa Municipality (1971);Herman Struck Prize, Haifa Municipality (1997) }}Batia Friedkes Grossbard (April 14, 1910 – August 11, 1995) was a Polish-born Israeli painter influenced by American abstract expressionism.[1] She attended and graduated from the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts in Poland. Grossbard worked with watercolor and oil paints, as well as producing lithographs.[2]In 1938, she immigrated to Palestine. After resettling there, served with the British Army. She later settled in Haifa and married the painter Yehoshua Grossbard.[3] In 1954, she studied at the atelier of André Lhote in Paris, France. She was a member of the Ein Hod artists' colony in Haifa and of the Artists and Sculptors Association in Israel.[2] In 1966, "Lines and Trees," a collection of her work, was published.[2] Her work includes mountainscapes of the post-Six Day War period through the 1970s. Her later work was much more abstract.[3] Awards - Herman Struck Prize, Haifa Municipality (1971)[2]
- Herman Struck Prize, Haifa Municipality (1997)[2]
Exhibitions - Artists in Israel for the Defense at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Helena Rubinstein Pavilion in Tel Aviv (July 25, 1967 - August 8, 1967)[4]
- General Exhibition, Art in Israel 1967 at the Tel Aviv Museum in Tel Aviv (September 17, 1967 - October 12, 1967)[4]
- Art Festival, Painting & Sculpture in Israel 1969 at Ganei Hataarucha in Tel Aviv (September 3, 1969 - September 25, 1969)[4]
- Painting and Sculpture Week at the Painters and Sculptors Association in Israel at Haifa and the North (September 27, 1969 - October 4, 1969)[4]
- Drawings and Paintings at the Artists' House in Jerusalem (January 6, 1973 - January 24, 1973)[4]
- Group Exhibition at the Haifa City Museum in Haifa (July 10, 1976 - July 31, 1976)[4]
- Five Years to "Alon" at the Allon Museum in Jerusalem (1983)[4]
- Paintings - Batia Grossbard at the Debel Gallery in Ein Kerem, Jerusalem (June 2, 1984 - June 21, 1984)[4]
- Haifa - Portrait of a City at the Museum of Art in Haifa (1988)[4]
- Modern Drawing - New Approaches at the Haifa Museum of Modern Art (January 30, 1988 - March 12, 1988)[4]
- Group Exhibition at the Yad Labanim Museum in Petach-Tikva (October 12, 1991 - November 16, 1991)[4]
- Batia Grossbard - Solo Exhibition at the Municipal Art Gallery, Smilansky Cultural Center in Rehovot (May 28, 1994 - July 2, 1994)[4]
- Solo Exhibition at the Gallery of Art, University of Haifa in Haifa (1996)[4]
- Artists Messengers of Peace at the Artists' House in Jerusalem (1996)[4]
- Batia Grossbard, The Large Paintings 1979-89 at the University of Haifa, Faculty of Humanities, Gallery of Art in Haifa (December 21, 1996 - February 13, 1997)[4]
- Exhibition of Struck Prizewinners at the Painters and Sculptors Association in Israel at Haifa and the North (March 15, 1997 - April 1, 1997)[4]
- Women Artists in Israeli Art - The 80's at Alternative Exhibition places in Haifa (1998)[4]
- Vision of Light: A Century of Watercolor in Israel at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem (December 1, 1998 - February 28, 1999)[4]
- Batia Grossbard - Works on paper at the Ein-Hod Artists' Gallery, Janco Dada Museum in Ein Hod (October 23, 1999 - November 10, 1999)[4]
- Meeting in the Atelier: Kupferman and his Teachers at The Kupferman Collection House in Kibbutz Lochamei Hagetaot (2006)[4]
- Salt of the Earth - Israeli Portraits at the Wilfrid Israel Museum, Oriental Art and Studies in Kibbutz Hazorea (June 7, 2008 - September 7, 2008)[4]
- Group Exhibition at Zaritsky Artists House in Tel Aviv (July 5, 2018 - July 28, 2018)[4]
References 1. ^{{Cite web|url=https://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/artists-israeli-1970-to-present|title=Artists: Israeli, 1970 to the Present {{!}} Jewish Women's Archive|website=jwa.org|access-date=2019-03-25}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 {{Cite web|url=https://museum.imj.org.il/artcenter/newsite/en/?artist=Grossbard,%20Batia|title=Information Center for Israeli Art {{!}} The Israel Museum, Jerusalem|website=museum.imj.org.il|access-date=2019-03-25}} 3. ^1 {{Cite book|url=http://www.tnis.eu/files/documents/Dan_Cohn-Sherbok_Dictionary_of_Jewish_Biography.pdf|title=Dictionary of Jewish Biography|last=Cohn-Sherbok|first=Dan|publisher=Bloomsbury Academic|year=2005|isbn=0826462502|location=|pages=106-107}} 4. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 {{Cite web|url=https://museum.imj.org.il/artcenter/newsite/en/exhibitions/?artist=Grossbard,%20Batia&list=G|title=Israel Museum Information Center for Israeli Art - Exhibitions Page|website=museum.imj.org.il|access-date=2019-03-27}}
External Links - [https://www.geni.com/people/Batia-Grossbard/6000000021234800828]
- [https://www.mutualart.com/Artist/Batya-Grossbard/C2F2F26227356E74]
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