SCHATZ, BORIS

SCHATZ, BORIS
SCHATZ, BORIS (1867–1932), painter and sculptor; founder of the bezalel School of Art in Jerusalem. Schatz was born in   Varna, province of Kovno, Lithuania. The son of a melammed, he was sent to the yeshivah in Vilna but broke away from his family and religious studies and turned to art. In 1889 he went to Paris and worked under the sculptor antokolsky , and the painter Cormon. He was invited in 1895 to Bulgaria where he became court sculptor to Prince Ferdinand and was a founder of the Royal Academy of Art in Sofia. In 1900 he received the gold medal in the Paris Salon for his Head of Old Woman. After meeting Theodor Herzl in 1903, he became an enthusiastic Zionist. Schatz first proposed the idea of an art school at the 1905 Zionist Congress and when it was accepted went to Palestine to execute it. Three years later, he settled in Jerusalem, where he established the Bezalel School of Art (1906), to which he soon added a small museum. Schatz arranged exhibitions of the Bezalel crafts in Europe and the U.S. These were the first displays of the products of Ereẓ Israel exhibited abroad. During World War I, the school was closed down, and Schatz was held prisoner for ten months. He succeeded in obtaining funds in the U.S. for the reconstruction of his school and the museum. He died in Denver, Colorado, while on a successful fund-raising mission and was buried on Mount Scopus in Jerusalem. The school was closed on his death, but reestablished the following year with the aid of a government grant. Schatz was both a realist and an idealist, a product of the dying romanticism and the reawakening of national consciousness in Eastern Europe. He took this spirit with him to Palestine, and adapted it to the needs of the country. The Bezalel School gave a young generation of artists and craftsmen the opportunity to study in the country and fostered a national style of arts and crafts, based on European techniques and Near-Eastern art forms. Schatz was a prolific artist, concentrating mainly on sculpture. His work is characterized by a naturalistic romanticism. From 1903, he worked almost exclusively on Jewish themes, representing religious practices, Jewish leaders, and biblical subject. His main works include: Mattathias, Blessing the Candles, Havdalah, The Scribe, Blowing the Shofar, Isaiah, At the Wailing Wall, Herzl, Bialik, Ben-Yehudah, and Isaac M. Wise. His son BEZALEL (1912–1978), an expressional abstract artist, illustrated Henry Miller's silk-screen printed Into the Night Life and specialized in ceramic murals and metal projects combined with architecture and craft designing (including one of the two gates at the Yad Vashem memorial, Jerusalem). Bezalel's wife, LOUISE, was an artist known for her delicate abstract water colors. Boris' daughter ZAHARA (1916– ) created abstract sculpture in plastics and wire. She received the Israel Prize (1954). -BIBLIOGRAPHY: B. Schatz, 31 Oil paintings (1921); H. Gamzu, Painting and Sculpture in Israel (1951), 11–12. ADD BIBLIOGRAPHY: N. Shilo-Cohen (ed.), Bezalel shel Schatz – 1906–1929, Israel Museum, Jerusalem (1983); Y. Zalmona, Boris Schatz, Hakibbutz Hameuhad, Jerusalem (1985). (Yona Fisher)

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Schatz, Boris — (1867–1932)    Lithuanian artist. Schatz was an established European sculptor and painter before coming to Jerusalem in 1906 to found the Bezalel School of Art and its museum. The school trained young artists in the yishuv and developed… …   Who’s Who in Jewish History after the period of the Old Testament

  • Schatz, Boris — (1867 1932)    Palestinian painter and sculptor, of Lithuanian origin. He was born in Varna, in the province of Kovno. He studied sculpture in Paris, and in 1895 became court sculptor to Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria. At the Zionist Congress of… …   Dictionary of Jewish Biography

  • Boris Schatz — (Kaunas, Russian Empire, 1867 – Denver, Colorado, USA, 1932) was a Russian born Jewish artist and sculptor, who founded what is now known as the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem.BiographySchatz s father, a teacher in a cheder (a… …   Wikipedia

  • Boris Schatz — (* 23. Dezember 1866 in Vorna bei Kowno; † 23. März 1932 in Denver, Colorado) war ein jüdischer Bildhauer, Maler und Lehrer und wurde zum Gründer der Bezalel Akademie für Kunst und Kunsthandwerk in Jerusalem …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Schatz (Begriffsklärung) — Schatz bezeichnet: einen wertvollen Fund, siehe Schatz eine Steuer, siehe Schatzung Schatz ist ein häufig verwendeter Kosename ein Flächenmaß, siehe Schatz (Einheit) Schatz ist der Familienname folgender Personen: Albert Schatz (1920–2005),… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Schatz — is both a German surname meaning treasure or treasury (the name may be ornamental or occupational, as in a town treasurer), and (more commonly) a Jewish surname meaning cantor.The latter version of Schatz or Shatz is a Hebrew acronym for shaliach …   Wikipedia

  • Schatz von Eberswalde — Teile des Goldfunds von Eberswalde (Nachbildung; Museum für Vor und Frühgeschichte Berlin) Der Schatz von Eberswalde ist ein Goldschatz von 2,59 kg Gewicht. Er gilt als bedeutendster mitteleuropäischer Bronzezeit Fund und ist der größte… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Zahara Schatz — Zahara Schatz, a.k.a. Zahara Shatz and Zaraha Sandow (Jerusalem, Palestine, 1916–Jerusalem, Israel, 1999), is an Israeli fine and decorative artist and daughter of Boris Schatz, who founded the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, as it is known… …   Wikipedia

  • Шац, Борис — Борис Шац (рожд. Борис Ильич (Залмен Бер) Шац, в Израиле также известен как Барух Шац и Борис Цемах Шац, англ. Boris Schatz; 1866, Ворно Ковенской губернии …   Википедия

  • 3 fragezeichen — Die drei ??? (gesprochen: Die drei Fragezeichen; Originaltitel: The Three Investigators; Nebenform: Die drei Detektive), ist eine Jugendbuch Serie, die ursprünglich aus den Vereinigten Staaten stammt und später in Deutschland fortgesetzt wurde.… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”