Auction 73 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
Yehiel Krize (1909-1968) – Figures – Oil on Board
Opening: $800
Unsold
Yehiel Krize (1909-1968), Figures.
Oil on board. Signed. ?Yechiel Krize (1909-1968), born in Turek (Poland), immigrated to Palestine with his family in 1923. At first he worked as his father's apprentice, painting houses, and in his twenties, was employed as a packer in citrus orchards. At that time, having no background in art, he started painting. Later, he studied at the studios of Avigdor Stematsky and Joseph Zaritsky, and in 1935, travelled to study art in Paris. During his stay in Europe he worked in the artists' colony in Kazimierz Dolny, Poland. In 1947-1948, he was twice awarded the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Krize was close to artists of the New Horizons movement, his style growing increasingly abstract over the years, especially after his seven-month stay in New York in 1958-1959. Nevertheless, he chose to work as an independent artist, not joining any group. Solo exhibitions of his work were held at the Tel-Aviv Museum of Art, at the Artists' House in Tel-Aviv and Haifa and elsewhere, but his works were also exhibited in the official New Horizons exhibition at the Mishkan Museum of Art, Ein Harod, in 1963.
Approx. 46X35 cm, in a 72X61 cm frame. Minor blemishes to paint.
Oil on board. Signed. ?Yechiel Krize (1909-1968), born in Turek (Poland), immigrated to Palestine with his family in 1923. At first he worked as his father's apprentice, painting houses, and in his twenties, was employed as a packer in citrus orchards. At that time, having no background in art, he started painting. Later, he studied at the studios of Avigdor Stematsky and Joseph Zaritsky, and in 1935, travelled to study art in Paris. During his stay in Europe he worked in the artists' colony in Kazimierz Dolny, Poland. In 1947-1948, he was twice awarded the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Krize was close to artists of the New Horizons movement, his style growing increasingly abstract over the years, especially after his seven-month stay in New York in 1958-1959. Nevertheless, he chose to work as an independent artist, not joining any group. Solo exhibitions of his work were held at the Tel-Aviv Museum of Art, at the Artists' House in Tel-Aviv and Haifa and elsewhere, but his works were also exhibited in the official New Horizons exhibition at the Mishkan Museum of Art, Ein Harod, in 1963.
Approx. 46X35 cm, in a 72X61 cm frame. Minor blemishes to paint.
Israeli and International Art
Israeli and International Art