Auction 87 - Jewish and Israeli Art, History and Culture
Including: sketches by Ze'ev Raban and Bezalel items, hildren's books, avant-garde books, rare ladino periodicals, and more
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Ze'ev Raban (1890-1970), sketches of coins, based on coins from the Hasmonean kingdom, the Herodian kingdom, the Bar Kokhba revolt; and pendants and pins made based on these sketches. [Jerusalem, 1950s].
Lot includes: • Ten large sketches based on eight early coins (some taken from both sides of the same coin). Pencil and ink on paper. All bear the stamp of Raban's studio.
40X50 cm on average. Good-fair condition. Tears, stains and blemishes. Some repairs with acidic adhesive tape.
• Eight medallions, mostly based on the present sketches; some double-sided. One pendant depicts the Tower of David on verso, and one depicts the Roaring Lion Monument in Tel-Hai.
Diameter: approx. 26 to 30 mm. Good condition. Minor stains and corrosion.
• 13 pins based on these sketches and on other early coins.
Diameter: 10 mm (apart from two pins, which are 23 mm in diameter). Good condition.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Lot 337 Ze'ev Raban (1890-1970) – Wine Labels / The Twelve Spies – Collection of Sketches and Prints
Pencil and ink on paper; lithographs.
Ten leaves with sketches (some with several sketches) for labels of Carmel Oriental wine, for a medallion depicting the twelve spies, and more; two sheets with print proofs, some upside down; six final versions of printed wine labels. A label for the Chateau King Solomon wine of Carmel Oriental is photographed in "Ze'ev Raban: a Hebrew Symbolist", p. 109 (the Hebrew version of the label is included in the present collection).
Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
Literature: Batsheva Goldman Ida, Ze'ev Raban: a Hebrew Symbolist. Tel Aviv and Jerusalem: Tel Aviv Museum of Art and Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi, 2001.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Pen and wash on paper. Stamped "Ze'ev Raban, Jerusalem" (Hebrew).
The "Gold Fund" was established during the World Zionist Conference in London (1920), as part of Keren Hayesod, with the purpose of collecting donations of gold jewelry and then selling the gold to fund construction works in Palestine.
On verso: an additional sketch for an illustration to Bialik's legend "King Solomon and the Queen of Sheba."
Both sketches appear in the catalogue "Ze'ev Raban: a Hebrew Symbolist", pp. 94 and 124.
24X16.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains and blemishes.
Literature: Batsheva Goldman Ida, Ze'ev Raban: a Hebrew Symbolist. Tel Aviv and Jerusalem: Tel Aviv Museum of Art and Yad Yitzhak Ben Zvi, 2001.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Ink and watercolor on paper. Stamped "Ze'ev Raban, Jerusalem" (Hebrew).
The sketch depicts Joseph Trumpeldor dying under a tree, Mount Hermon and a group of marching halutzim (pioneers). A Hebrew caption at the bottom of the drawing reads: "the Dying Hero"; an additional patriotic caption below praises the heroism of those who fell for the cause of Zionism, and urges one to act, so as not to let their death be in vain.
On verso: an additional, unfinished, sketch, depicting a girl in a pointed hat reading a scroll against the backdrop of Jerusalem's skyline.
24X16.5 cm. Good condition.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Ze'ev Raban (1890-1970), sketch for the Jerusalem Printing Works building, made for the publisher Shlomo Salzman. [Jerusalem, 1919].
Ink on paper. With the stamp of Raban's studio.
The sketch depicts a three-domed building, with many decorative elements and designs in Raban's typical style. The central dome is topped with a statue of a bearded man (distinctly reminiscent of Boris Schatz's Matityahu), holding up a scroll with the inscription "Am HaSefer" [People of the Book].
Shlomo Salzman, a prominent Hebrew publisher in Russia and Germany, was the owner of the Kadima publishing house in Odessa, the Salzman publishing house which relocated with him from St. Petersburg to Berlin, and the HaSefer publishing house in Berlin. After he left Russia in 1919 and before he settled in Berlin, he paid a visit to Jerusalem where he wished to establish a printing press and publishing house.
Dr. Gil Weissblei, in his book "The Revival of the Hebrew Book Art in Weimar Germany" (2019, pp. 87-99; Hebrew), writes about Salzman's efforts to establish a colossal publishing district named Kiryat Sefer in Jerusalem – "A special district […] on the outskirts of Jerusalem, which would comprise printing presses; workshops […] factories for printing blocks; bookbinderies; warehouses for paper, paint, and binding equipment; and more". Together with a few Zionist activists who shared his vision, he managed the "Am HaSefer" company, to raise the funds needed for establishing this publishing enterprise. Amongst its other activities, the company acquired Ze'ev Raban's "Song of Songs" and his illustrations to the book "Aleph Bet". Concurrently, the company commissioned Raban to design the proposed printing house: "A receipt for the sum of eight lirot to the artist Ze'ev Raban indicates that Salzman received from him, on September 1, 1919, a drawing of the proposed Jerusalem Printing Works building. Raban […] was a rising star in the field of Hebrew art in those days – though without formal architectural education […]. According to Weissblei, the architectural and engineering plans were prepared by the engineer Ben Zion Gini, based on Raban's proposal. Due to the 1920 Palestine riots, Salzman was compelled to abandon his dream, and he left Jerusalem for Berlin, where he established the HaSefer publishing house.
Weissblei notes that he did not see the plan itself, and that Raban's archive deposited in the Jerusalem municipality archive comprises items beginning from 1922. The present item is therefore the missing plan from Raban's estate which was passed on to his partner, Shlomo Kedmi.
Approx. 54X33 cm. Fair-good condition. Marginal closed and open tears. Stains. Fold lines. Tears to center of leaf, along vertical fold (repaired with tape on verso).
Literature: Gil Weissblei, "The Revival of the Hebrew Book Art in Weimar Germany". Jerusalem: Carmel, 2019.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Ink and pencil on paper.
• Ten different sketches – proposals for logos of the Hebrew University. Most bear the motto "Acquire truth". Some are marked Gal-Ed and some are signed with a drawing of a small fish. • Eleven sketches for pins (or perhaps also for a logo) of the Friends of the Hebrew University. • Sketch for a pin "For Devotion to Hadassah". The pin was produced by Bezalel and presented to Hadassa activists.
The present sketches are not signed. Other sketches by Raban for the Hebrew University logo, also bearing the words Gal-Ed or signed with a drawing of a fish, were stamped "Z. Raban, Industrial Art Studio (Formerly Gur-Aryeh & Raban)"; see Kedem auction 60, item 317. A pin similar (though not identical) to one of the sketches was produced by Shmuel Kretchmer for the Friends of the Hebrew University.
Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Ink on paper.
1. Sketch for a dedicatory plaque with a map of the Galilee: "Eretz Israel, Upper Galilee. Presented to the redeemer of the Hula Valley, Yehoshua Hankin, by his colleagues, on his 70th jubilee" (Hebrew). Signed in Hebrew: "Gur Arieh and Raban, Jerusalem". [1934].
44.5X21.5 cm. Good condition. Stains and minor blemishes. Fold lines.
2. Sketch of a map of the Galilee region, created for "HaYarden ltd."
11.5X7.5 cm. Good condition. Minor stains to margins.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
The collection comprises sketches for a variety of works designed by Raban, ranging from book illustrations and ornaments, to various objects and commercial logos.
Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Some 250 photographs, mostly of finished works planned and designed by Raban. Including: • Reliefs and ornaments for the YMCA building. • Tomb of the Armenian Patriarch (designed and produced in conjunction with Meir Gur Aryeh). • Bookbindings, including the Book of Job in silver binding (see: Ze'ev Raban: a Hebrew Symbolist, p. 166), the Golden Book of the JNF, and books of the Bible. • Stained glass windows of Temple Emanuel in Beaumont, Texas, and of the Great Synagogue in Tel Aviv. • Ceremonial objects for various purposes and communities. • Memorial plaques, including reliefs of Meir Dizengoff and Chaim Arlozorov. • Plaque in honor of Yehoshua Hankin, a memorial plaque for the YMCA building, and more. • Graphic works, including book illustrations, certificates of honor, an illustrated scroll of Ezra and Nehemiah gifted to Lord Balfour in honor of the establishment of the Hebrew University, and more.
Size and condition vary.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Collection of visiting cards, stationery from various periods and other paper items from the Industrial Art Studio of Ze'ev Raban and Meir Gur Aryeh. [Jerusalem, ca. 1920s-1950s].
Included: • Approx. 50 blank stationery papers from various periods; some from the joint studio of Gur-Aryeh and Raban and some from the period when the studio was owned exclusively by Raban. Some bear a logo designed by Raban, in a style reminiscent of the old Bezalel; some are more recent, designed in a modernist style. • Trilingual advertisement for the Industrial Art Studio, listing the variety of services the studio is able to provide, in the fields of drawings, sculpture, graphic works, repoussé work, engraving and etching, and architecture. • Approx. 40 copies of Ze'ev Raban's visiting card. • Stationery papers for the personal use of Ze'ev Raban, with his name and address only.
Size and condition vary.
Enclosed: Advertisement for the exhibition: Raban Remembered, Jerusalem's Forgotten Master, held at the Yeshiva University Museum, 1982-1983.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
Two autograph letters – correspondence between Jacob Eisenberg and founder of Bezalel, Boris Schatz: Eisenberg's letter of application to Bezalel and Schatz’s letter of acceptance. Pinsk and Jerusalem: 1913. Hebrew.
1. Application letter by Jacob Eisenberg, seeking admission to Bezalel. Signed and dated: Jacob Joshua Eisenberg, Pinsk, 27.4.1913.
[1] f., 20.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, creases and fold lines. Closed and open tears (mostly minor) to edges and along fold lines, with minor blemishes to text.
2. Official acceptance letter addressed to Eisenberg by Boris Schatz, written on Bezalel stationery. Signed and dated: Prof. Boris Schatz, Jerusalem, 16.5.1913.
[1] f., approx. 28 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, creases and fold lines. Marginal tears. Long tears along fold lines (separation) with minor damage to text (mainly to address.)
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.
1. Letter dated June, 1916. Addressing his students, Schatz reassures them that all will be well, and insists that hope is not to be abandoned, since peace is near.
[1] f. (two written pages), 27 cm.
2. Letter dated June, 1916. Addressed by Schatz to his students in Beersheba, consoling them with a promise for work and better pay at the service of A. Finkelstein.
With a line added by Ze'ev Raban, alongside Schatz's signature: "warm greetings, Z. Raban."
[1] f. (one written page), 27 cm.
3. Letter dated August, 1916. Addressing his students in Beersheba, Schatz writes that the pencils, erasers, coal, and paper he sent, will allow them to draw again, thus strengthening them, and increasing their ability to endure all hardships, until peace comes.
[1] f. (two written pages), 27 cm.
4. Letter dated June, 1916, addressed to Eliezer Yellin (son of David Yellin), an engineer officer serving in the Ottoman army. Schatz petitions Yellin to reassign eight of his students (among whom are David Maaravi-Marovne and Jacob Eisenberg), to the position of drafters. He writes that since they recently arrived from Russia, the students find the scorching heat of Beersheba unbearable, and are in need of an easier task than the one with which they were assigned.
[1] f. (one written page), approx. 13X20 cm.
Three of the letters are written on official Bezalel stationery.
Condition varies.
Provenance: Estate of Shlomo Kedmi.