One of the fathers of Israeli painting, Menahem Shemi (born Schmidt) was born in Bobruisk (now Belarus) and studied art in Odessa. An impoverished student, he arrived in Jerusalem in 1913, enrolling at the Bezalel School of Arts and Crafts. During World War I, he was drafted into the Ottoman army, but he deserted and eventually fought as part of the Jewish Legion. He gradually found his footing as a teacher and artist, mixing Eastern and European styles into his own aesthetic. Shemi’s painting career flourished over the following several decades, even during the war years. Serving in the British army and painting in his free hours, Shemi continued to evolve artistically, using his refined, cosmopolitan style to capture the land, the people, and the spirit of the Yishuv (Jewish settlement) on the eve of the State of Israel’s historic creation. His paintings reflect a desire to create a distinctive Land of Israel style while remaining true to the modernism of the school of Paris.
Jimmy’s body was taken to Har Tuv, where the doctor confirmed his death, and from Har Tuv it was taken to the morgue in the hospital in the convent of Abu Gosh. He lay there, covered with a gray…
This painting has both figurative and abstract elements. The shapes representing the angel are a dynamic swirl of mystical symbols. Ben-Zion often turned to the Bible for inspiration for his work. At…
These silver earrings of solid lunates have fixed attachments and attachments of hollow granule clusters. They are from a tomb at Tel Ira in the northern Negev.