Ruth Schloss

1922–2013

Born in Nuremberg, Ruth Schloss immigrated to Palestine as a teenager in 1937. She enrolled in Jerusalem’s New Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts, where she studied painting under Mordechai Ardon. During the 1940s, Schloss devoted herself to the kibbutz movement, putting aside her art. She resumed painting in 1962, the same year that she opened her studio in Jaffa, which she ran until 1983. Schloss mainly worked with ink and watercolor on paper. Her signature pieces show the influence of the Communist Party and of Soviet socialist realism, a popular aesthetic among Israeli artists at the time. She illustrated books, magazines, and newspapers with figurative imagery focused on the human condition and social oppression. All Schloss’s work carries a charge of social criticism and political commentary. Her later works, however, are larger in scale and more expressive and personally motivated.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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In the Ma‘abarah

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Ruth Schloss’s artworks were infused with her commitment to social justice and egalitarianism. This painting of a ma‘abarah (refugee absorption camp), made at a time when the new State of Israel was…