Dmitry Borisovitch Lion was a Russian-born graphic artist and a member of the postwar Soviet nonconformist art movement that rejected the restrictions of socialist realism. Lion, who was born in Kaluga, attended the School of Art in Moscow and later the Moscow Institute of Architecture. After completing his art education, Lion fought in the Red Army between 1943 and 1952, after which he was able to pursue his artistic career, beginning as a graphic artist and teacher in 1953. In 1964, Lion founded a private art academy and taught while continuing his own work. Lion is recognized for his large-scale triptych of Janusz Korczak as well as a number of abstract drawings. His works have been exhibited at the Russian Museum in St. Petersburg and the Pushkin Museum of Fine Arts in Moscow.
This building, photographed by Liselotte Grschebina, is one of approximately four thousand Bauhaus-style buildings constructed in Tel Aviv, the most of any city in the world. The Nazi Party’s rise to…
This detail appears on the right side of a pithos (storage jar) from Kuntillet Ajrud. The seated figure plays a lyre held away from the body. There seem to be four strings, oriented vertically…
Born to converso parents and baptized as Manoel Dias Soeiro, Menasseh Ben Israel moved as a boy with his family to Amsterdam, where they reverted openly to Judaism. In 1626, he established the first…