Subasta 26 Parte 2
Por Moses Collectibles
9.10.24
Hate'ena 10, Petach Tikva, Israel
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יצחק ליכטנשטיין (1888-1981), פסטל על נייר, נוף, 25X18ס"מ, חתום. עבודותיו נדירות. מראשוני התלמידים בבצלאל, החל ללמוד ...

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9.10.24 en Moses Collectibles
etiquetas: Arte Israelí

יצחק ליכטנשטיין (1888-1981), פסטל על נייר, נוף, 25X18ס"מ, חתום. עבודותיו נדירות. מראשוני התלמידים בבצלאל, החל ללמוד ב-1908. יצחק ליכטנשטיין, יליד פולין, פעל בארץ-ישראל, צרפת וארצות-הברית, 1888–1981 יצחק ליכטינשטיין נולד בלודז', פולין, בשנת 1888. בשנת 1906 למד ציור בקראקוב, ובשנת 1908 הגיע לארץ-ישראל ללמוד ב"בצלאל" בירושלים עם שמואל הירשנברג ובוריס שץ. היה חבר בקבוצת "רמון". בשנת 1910 חזר לאירופה, שם חי בקרקוב, מינכן ופריז. בין השנים 1913-1912 התגורר שוב בארץ-ישראל. בשנת 1914 חזר לפריז, שם היה חבר בקבוצת האמנים היהודים "מחמדים" (Machmadim). באותה שנה היגר לארצות-הברית, שם עסק בכתיבה אודות אמנות ובניהול מרכז יהודי. לימודים 1906 ציור, קראקוב, פולין. מקור הטקסט: ויקיפדיה. בעבודותיו השפעות קוביסטיות ואקספרסיוניסטיות. Isaac Lichtenstein was born into a Jewish family in Łódź, Poland in 1889 and studied art at the Academy in Krakow. As a young man, he travelled widely, going to Paris at the turn of the twentieth century, where he was among the loose group of émigré artists, mainly of Eastern-European Jewish descent, living and working together at the collection of La Ruche (The Beehive) studios in Montparnasse and known as the École de Paris or School of Paris. Together with Pinchus Krémègne, Henri Epstein, Leo Koenig, Marek Szwarc and Leon Indenbaum, Lichtenstein was one of the artists behind the publication of ‘Machmadim’ (Precious Ones), a textless Jewish art journal that was first published in 1912. Shortly after the outbreak of the First World War, Lichtenstein arrived in London together with Lazar Berson, who in 1915 founded Ben Uri, with Lichtenstein as a founder member. He is thought to have lived in America for much of the war, volunteering in 1918 to join the Jewish Legion and serving in Palestine. In 1920 Lichtenstein was briefly in London, where he was again in contact with Ben Uri, designing its second logo (Berson having departed in 1916) and giving a talk to the Society in the same year. In 1927 his work was included in the important exhibition of Jewish art and antiquities at the Whitechapel Art Gallery. After the war, Lichtenstein moved between London, Poland, Paris, and America, where he spent most of his life, reviving the Machmadim Publishing House devoted to the production of artistic Yiddish books. In 1925 he had an exhibition in Vilnius, comprising more than 100 works grouped in three sections: oil paintings, watercolours and drawings, and scenic projects, also providing a foreword in Yiddish for the accompanying catalogue ('Yidishe kunst-gezelshaft in Vilne Oysshtelung fun di gezamelte verk fun Yitskhok Likhtenshteyn'). In the Ben Uri's 1930 catalogue and survey of activities, Lichtenstein was described as ‘a gifted colourist and keen student of Jewish art, [who] has, during his residence in London, rendered great services to the Ben Uri by professional advice and also by his interesting lectures on art and artists’. In June 1931 the Ben Uri Jewish Art & Literary Society mounted an Exhibition of Paintings and Dry Points by Isaac Lichtenstein at 63 Mansell Street in Aldgate (it was noted in the AGM minutes for 1931 that this ‘had not been a financial success for the artist concerned’). His work was included in numerous group exhibitions at Ben Uri including the Opening of the Ben Uri Jewish Art Gallery and an Exhibition of Works by Jewish Artists at Woburn House in 1934, an ‘Exhibition of Jewish Art’, arranged by the Ben Uri Art Gallery at the North Western Reform Synagogue in 1948, and a selection of works from the Ben Uri at the Russell-Cotes Gallery, Bournemouth in 1970. A monograph of his work with a text by Simon L. Millner was published by Machmadim Art Editions in New York in 1949. Isaac Lichtenstein died in New York in 1981.