Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Igael Tumarkin was born in 1933 in Dresden, Germany. Immigrated to Israel in 1935. He studied art with the sculptor Rudi Lehman at Ein Hod, and in 1955 returned to Germany where he worked at the Berliner Ensemble with Bertolt Brecht. He worked in Europe until 1961 as a sculptor and set designer. His travels took him to Africa, the Near and Far East, and to the USA, where he lived for several years. Since the end of the Seventies he has been living and working in Tel Aviv.
The artist has worked extensively in the medium of printmaking, producing over three hundred prints. He was encouraged by the print studios founded during those years in the USA, where prominent artists such as Jasper Jones and Robert Rauschenberg began to engage in printmaking.
Tumarkin prints of the sixties were at crossroads between Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art, and between Pop Art and abstract movements that followed. In addition, he was influenced by the Surrealism and Dada movements whose impact was expressed in the combination of free brushstrokes and drip paintings together with the use of such materials as newspaper cuttings, photographs and junk.
He has participated in various international exhibitions, and won many awards. His works are displayed in private collections and in museums both in Israel and abroad.
IGAEL TUMARKIN
Menashe Kadishman was an Israeli sculptor, painter, and graphic artist best known for his colorful paintings of sheep and large-scale metal sculptures. Kadishman’s youth as a shepherd at a kibbutz informed the sheep motif found throughout his work.
Born on August 21, 1932 in Tel Aviv, Israel, he studied under Moshe Sternschuss at the Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv before moving to London in 1959, where he studied at St. Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Art. The artist’s work from immediately after art school in London was heavily indebted to the aesthetics of Minimalist sculpture. He has also cited Henry Moore as one of his biggest influences. Kadishman died on May 8, 2015 in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Today, his works are in the collections of the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, among others.
Menashe Kadishman
Menashe Kadishman was an Israeli sculptor, painter, and graphic artist best known for his colorful paintings of sheep and large-scale metal sculptures. Kadishman’s youth as a shepherd at a kibbutz informed the sheep motif found throughout his work.
Born on August 21, 1932 in Tel Aviv, Israel, he studied under Moshe Sternschuss at the Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv before moving to London in 1959, where he studied at St. Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Art. The artist’s work from immediately after art school in London was heavily indebted to the aesthetics of Minimalist sculpture. He has also cited Henry Moore as one of his biggest influences. Kadishman died on May 8, 2015 in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Today, his works are in the collections of the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, among others.
Menashe Kadishman
Menashe Kadishman was an Israeli sculptor, painter, and graphic artist best known for his colorful paintings of sheep and large-scale metal sculptures. Kadishman’s youth as a shepherd at a kibbutz informed the sheep motif found throughout his work.
Born on August 21, 1932 in Tel Aviv, Israel, he studied under Moshe Sternschuss at the Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv before moving to London in 1959, where he studied at St. Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Art. The artist’s work from immediately after art school in London was heavily indebted to the aesthetics of Minimalist sculpture. He has also cited Henry Moore as one of his biggest influences. Kadishman died on May 8, 2015 in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Today, his works are in the collections of the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, among others.
Menashe Kadishman
Menashe Kadishman was an Israeli sculptor, painter, and graphic artist best known for his colorful paintings of sheep and large-scale metal sculptures. Kadishman’s youth as a shepherd at a kibbutz informed the sheep motif found throughout his work.
Born on August 21, 1932 in Tel Aviv, Israel, he studied under Moshe Sternschuss at the Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv before moving to London in 1959, where he studied at St. Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Art. The artist’s work from immediately after art school in London was heavily indebted to the aesthetics of Minimalist sculpture. He has also cited Henry Moore as one of his biggest influences. Kadishman died on May 8, 2015 in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Today, his works are in the collections of the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, among others.
Menashe Kadishman
Menashe Kadishman was an Israeli sculptor, painter, and graphic artist best known for his colorful paintings of sheep and large-scale metal sculptures. Kadishman’s youth as a shepherd at a kibbutz informed the sheep motif found throughout his work.
Born on August 21, 1932 in Tel Aviv, Israel, he studied under Moshe Sternschuss at the Avni Institute of Art and Design in Tel Aviv before moving to London in 1959, where he studied at St. Martin’s School of Art and the Slade School of Art. The artist’s work from immediately after art school in London was heavily indebted to the aesthetics of Minimalist sculpture. He has also cited Henry Moore as one of his biggest influences. Kadishman died on May 8, 2015 in Ramat Gan, Israel.
Today, his works are in the collections of the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville, NY, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, among others.
Menashe Kadishman
K1
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Silkscreen
Edition of 150
our artists
SHMUEL TEPLER
SHMUEL TEPLER
Menashe Kadishman
Menashe Kadishman
K2
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Screenprint
Edition of 150
Menashe Kadishman
K2
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Screenprint
Edition of 150
Menashe Kadishman
K2
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Screenprint
Edition of 150
Menashe Kadishman
K1
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Screenprint
Edition of 150
Menashe Kadishman
K2
34 x 33 cm
Hand Signed Screenprint
Edition of 150
GUILLAUME CORNEILLE
Guillaume Corneille was born in 1922 in Belgium. In 1940 he moved to Amsterdam to study in the Academy of Art. He founded CoBrA in 1949, a post-war Expressionist European movement, along with five other influential artists which included Karel Appel and Constant.
Corneille's style is considered imaginative and poetic. He is known by his eccentric use of color and the placing of familiar subjects in his works, such as cats, birds, and women, in mythological or juvenile settings.
His works are part of collections at the Cobra Museum of Modern Art in the Netherlands, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, and the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, among others.
He died on September 5, 2010 in Paris, France.
Works
China Suite VIII, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 172
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China Suite V, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 173
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China Suite IV, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 174
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China Suite VIII, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 175
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China Suite I, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 176
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China Suite II, 2004
45 x 45 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 177
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The Sunflower, 2004
90 x 115 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 90
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 178
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The Great Desert, 2003
152 x 242cm (Triptych)
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 60
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 179
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Flying fish, 2004
65 x 85 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 180
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Dream In the Desert, 2004
80 x 74 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 181
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Mushroom Pickers, 2004
62 x 76 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 182
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Belle Famme
65 x 53 cm
Metal Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 99, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 184
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Child with a kite, 2004
72 x 83 cm
Terragraph on canvas
Edition 120
Hand Signed and numbered
Ref. N°: 183
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Dialogue Multijoueur
64.5 x 63 cm
Metal Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 99, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 185
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Femme et d'oiseaux exotiques
51 x 66.5 cm
Metal Sculpture,screen printed and hand painted.
Edition of 149, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 186
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Dialogue Entre Femmes et Oiseaux
52 x 63 cm
Metal Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 99, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 187
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Chat de la Chance de Jaffa
55 x 71 x 0.2 cm
Metal Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 199, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 188
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Chat Blanc et Oiseau Rouge
34.5 x 23 x 7.5 cm
Wood Sculpture
Edition of 70 + E.A 10, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 189
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Birds in love
35 x 35 x 6 cm
Wood Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 99, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 190
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Cat and Moon in love
35 x 35 x 6 cm
Wood Sculpture, screen printed and hand painted
Edition of 99, signed in the plate
Ref. N°: 192