Michail Grobman Art
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Artist: Michail Grobman
Post Soviet Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Collage Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman an...
Category
1960s Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Gouache
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
MIchail Grobman
Gouache and watercolor on paper
Hand signed Lower Left and Dated 1964.
Described inn Cyrillic Russian verso.
Dimensions: L:13.25" W: 11.75".
Michail Grobman (Russ...
Category
1960s Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Gouache
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Volcano Lithograph Silkscreen
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Gorbman, Russian Born 1939.
Watercolor on Green Paper, Black Fish with Yellow Dots.
Hand signed Upper Left, Dated 1964.
Signed verso and Described.
Dimensions: 10 X 7.25 i...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
Flora and Fauna Silkscreen
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Shipping will be a bit longer as this piece is located in Israel
Michail Grobman, Israeli, born in Soviet Union, 1939.
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avantgarde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt...
Category
1980s Conceptual Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Animal Beast Lithograph Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Screen Print Leviathan
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman an...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Woodcut Woodblock Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Woodcut woodblock (small possibility it is a Silkscreen Serigraph) print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an a...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Woodcut
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Screen Print Lithograph
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman an...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Foil Silkscreen Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Volcano Lithograph Silkscreen
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Angel Lithograph Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Unicorn Silkscreen Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
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Post Soviet Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Collage Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John...
Category
1960s Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Gouache
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Gorbman, Russian Born 1939.
Watercolor on Green Paper, Black Fish with Yellow Dots.
Hand signed Upper Left, Dated 1964.
Signed verso and Described.
Dimensions: 10 X 7.25 inches
\
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Watercolor, Paper
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Gouache Painting Grobman
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
MIchail Grobman
Gouache and watercolor on paper
Hand signed Lower Left and Dated 1964.
Described inn Cyrillic Russian verso.
Dimensions: L:13.25" W: 11.75".
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgeniya Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt...
Category
1960s Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Paper, Watercolor, Gouache
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Screen Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt, Karl Eimermacher, Alexander Borovsky)
1998 The Boundaries of Language, Tel Aviv Museum of Art Tikkun. "Aspects of Israeli Art of the 70s", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordehaj Omer)
1997 "Nonconformists: The Second Russian Avant-garde, from the Bargera Collection", Russian National Museum, St. Petersburg; Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow; State Gallery, Frankfurt; Quadrat (J. Albers Museum Bottrop, Germany; Kunsthalle, Leverkusen, Germany (cat. texts: Hans Peter Rose, Yevegni Barabanov, Alexander Borovski)
1996 "Ketav: Flesh and Word in Israeli Art", Ackland Museum, North Carolina (cat. texts: Jerry Bolas, Gideon Ofrat, Michael Sgan-Cohen)
1995 "Unser Jahrhundert", Museum Ludwig, Cologne (cat. text: Marc Scheps, Barbara M. Thiemann, Stephanie M. Baumann, Jens Bove, Gerard Goodrow, Martin Spantig)
1994 "The Printer's Imprint", The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
"From Malevitch to Kabakov: Russian Avant-garde in the 20th Century", Museum Ludwig, Cologne
"Text-Image", Janco-Dada Museum, Ein Hod (cat. text: Sara Hackert)
1990 "Different Art", Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscov (cat.)
"The Museum as Collector", Tel Aviv Museum of Art
"Chagall to Kitaj: The Jewish Experience in 20th Century Art", Barbican Art Gallery, London (cat. text: Avram Kampf)
1989 "Wortlaut", K. Schopenhauer Gallery, Cologne (cat.)
"The Russian Avant-garde in the Early 20th Century", University Gallery, Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva (cat. text: Haim Finkelshtein)
"Abattoir '89", Marseilles (cat.)
1988 "Avant-garde - Revolution - Avant-garde", Tel Aviv Museum (cat. texts: Marc Scheps, Peter Spielmann) "Upon One of the Mountains: Jerusalem in Israeli Art", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordechal Omer)
1987 "Retrospection", Hermitage Garden Hall, Moscow
"Art Works Done in Groups", K-18, Kassel (cat.)
1984 "Transformations", University Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordechal Omer)
1981 "Leviathan Group", Jerusalem Theatre (cat.)
"Russian Samyzhdat Art, 1960-1982", Franklin Furance Gallery, New York; Chapaque Library Gallery, Washington, D.C. (leaflet)
1979 - 1980 "East European Art in the 20th Century", Museum of Art, Bochum, Germany (cat.)
"20 Years of Independent Art in the Soviet Union", Gallery of St. Mary's College, Maryland (leaflet)
1978 "Leviathan Group", Belt Uri and Rami Nechushtan Museum, Ashdot Yaacov (cat.) "New Art from the Soviet Union", Pratt Institute Gallery, New York (leaflet)
1975 "1970-1975" Progressive Trends in Moscow, Museum of Art, Bochum, Germany (cat.)
1973 "Modern Russian Art: Avantgarde Drawings", Ostwall Museum, Dortmund (cat.)
1970 "New Trends in Moscow", Museum of Art, Lugano (cat.)
1969 "The Russian Post Soviet...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Screen Print Lithograph
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Screen Print Leviathan
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Screen
Post Soviet Nonconformist Avant Garde Russian Israeli Woodcut Woodblock Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Woodcut woodblock (small possibility it is a Silkscreen Serigraph) print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Woodcut
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Volcano Lithograph Silkscreen
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Volcano Lithograph Silkscreen
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt, Karl Eimermacher, Alexander Borovsky)
1998 The Boundaries of Language, Tel Aviv Museum of Art Tikkun. "Aspects of Israeli Art of the 70s", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordehaj Omer)
1997 "Nonconformists: The Second Russian Avant-garde, from the Bargera Collection", Russian National Museum, St. Petersburg; Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow; State Gallery, Frankfurt; Quadrat (J. Albers Museum Bottrop, Germany; Kunsthalle, Leverkusen, Germany (cat. texts: Hans Peter Rose, Yevegni Barabanov, Alexander Borovski)
1996 "Ketav: Flesh and Word in Israeli Art", Ackland Museum, North Carolina (cat. texts: Jerry Bolas, Gideon Ofrat, Michael Sgan-Cohen)
1995 "Unser Jahrhundert", Museum Ludwig, Cologne (cat. text: Marc Scheps, Barbara M. Thiemann, Stephanie M. Baumann, Jens Bove, Gerard Goodrow, Martin Spantig)
1994 "The Printer's Imprint", The Israel Museum, Jerusalem
"From Malevitch to Kabakov: Russian Avant-garde in the 20th Century", Museum Ludwig, Cologne
"Text-Image", Janco-Dada Museum, Ein Hod (cat. text: Sara Hackert)
1990 "Different Art", Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscov (cat.)
"The Museum as Collector", Tel Aviv Museum of Art
"Chagall to Kitaj: The Jewish Experience in 20th Century Art", Barbican Art Gallery, London (cat. text: Avram Kampf)
1989 "Wortlaut", K. Schopenhauer Gallery, Cologne (cat.)
"The Russian Avant-garde in the Early 20th Century", University Gallery, Ben Gurion University, Beer Sheva (cat. text: Haim Finkelshtein)
"Abattoir '89", Marseilles (cat.)
1988 "Avant-garde - Revolution - Avant-garde", Tel Aviv Museum (cat. texts: Marc Scheps, Peter Spielmann) "Upon One of the Mountains: Jerusalem in Israeli Art", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordechal Omer)
1987 "Retrospection", Hermitage Garden Hall, Moscow
"Art Works Done in Groups", K-18, Kassel (cat.)
1984 "Transformations", University Gallery, Tel Aviv University (cat. text: Mordechal Omer)
1981 "Leviathan Group", Jerusalem Theatre (cat.)
"Russian Samyzhdat Art, 1960-1982", Franklin Furance Gallery, New York; Chapaque Library Gallery, Washington, D.C. (leaflet)
1979 - 1980 "East European Art in the 20th Century", Museum of Art, Bochum, Germany (cat.)
"20 Years of Independent Art in the Soviet Union", Gallery of St. Mary's College, Maryland (leaflet)
1978 "Leviathan Group", Belt Uri and Rami Nechushtan Museum, Ashdot Yaacov (cat.) "New Art from the Soviet Union", Pratt Institute Gallery, New York (leaflet)
1975 "1970-1975" Progressive Trends in Moscow, Museum of Art, Bochum, Germany (cat.)
1973 "Modern Russian Art: Avantgarde Drawings", Ostwall Museum, Dortmund (cat.)
1970 "New Trends in Moscow", Museum of Art, Lugano (cat.)
1969 "The Russian Post Soviet...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Angel Lithograph Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia....
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Animal Beast Lithograph Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Large Post Soviet Non Conformist Russian Israeli Foil Silkscreen Print
By Michail Grobman
Located in Surfside, FL
Silkscreen Serigraph print hand signed, numbered.
Michail Grobman (Russian: Михаил Гробман, Hebrew: מיכאיל גרובמן, born 1939) is an artist and a poet working in Israel and Russia. He is father to Hollywood producer Lati Grobman and Israeli architect Yasha Jacob Grobman.
Biography
1939 – Born in Moscow.
1960s – Active member of The Second Russian Avant-Garde movement in the Soviet Union.
1967 – Member of Moscow Artists Union.
1971 – Emigrates to Israel and settles in Jerusalem.
1975 – Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian).
Since 1983, he lives and works mainly in Tel Aviv.
Awards
In 2001, Grobman was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Painting.
Solo exhibitions
2007 – Last Skies, Loushy & Peter Art & Projects, Tel Aviv (cat. text: Marc Scheps)
2006 – Creation From Chaos to Cosmos, Bar-David Museum of Fine Art and Judaica, Kibbutz Baram (cat. text: Sorin Heller)
2002 – The Last Sky, installation, Tsveta Zuzoritch pavilion, Belgrad (cat. text: Irina Subotitch)
1999 – Mikhail Grobman: Works 1960–1998, The State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg (cat. texts: Evgenija Petrova, Marc Scheps, Lola Kantor-Kazovsky, Michail German)
Michail Grobman was born in Moscow. He grew up writing poetry, essays and literary prose. In the 1960s, he was active in the Second Russian Avant-garde movement in the Soviet Union. In 1971, he immigrated to Israel. In 1975, he established the Leviathan school together with Avraham Ofek and Shmuel Ackerman, seeking to combine symbolism, metaphysics and Judaism in an all-inclusive “national style.”
Grobman’s lithograph work employs images and symbols from Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. His paintings incorporate texts in Russian and Hebrew. In addition to his artistic endeavors, he writes about art and aesthetics. The group combined conceptual art and "land art" with Jewish symbolism. Of the three of them Avraham Ofek had the deepest interest in sculpture and its relationship to religious symbolism and images. In one series of his works Ofek used mirrors to project Hebrew letters, words with religious or cabbalistic significance, and other images onto soil or man-made structures. In his work "Letters of Light" (1979), for example, the letters were projected onto people and fabrics and the soil of the Judean Desert. In another work Ofek screened the words "America", "Africa", and "Green card" on the walls of the Tel Hai courtyard during a symposium on sculpture
Part of the generation of emigre Russian artists, many Jewish, that included Yuri Kuper, Komar and Melamid, Eduard Steinberg, Erik Bulatov, Viktor Pivovarov, Vladimir Yankilevsky, Ilya Kabakov and Grisha Bruskin.
Date of Birth: 1939, Moscow
1960s Active member of The Second Russian Avant Garde
1967 Member of the Moscow Painters Association
1971 Immigrated to Israel and settled in Jerusalem
1975 Founded the Leviathan group and art periodical (in Russian)
Since 1983 Lives and works in Tel Aviv
.
Selected Solo Exhibitions:
2002 Pavilion Zveta Zuzovich, "The Last Sky", Belgrad (cat: Irena Subotitch)
1999 The State Russian Museum, ST. Petersburg
1998 "Picture = Symbol + Concept", Herzliya Museum of Art, Herzliya
1995 "Password and Image", University Gallery, Haifa University
1990 Tova Osman Gallery, Tel Aviv
1989 "The Beautiful Sixties in Moscow", The Genia Schreiber University Art Gallery, Tel Aviv University (with llya Kabakov; cat. text: Mordechai Omer]
Spertus Museum, Chicago
Beit Rami and Uri Nechushtan, Ashdot Yaacov (leaflet)
1972 Nora Gallery, Jerusalem 1973 - Negev Museum, Beer Sheva
1971 Tel Aviv Museum of Art (cat. text: Haim Gamzu)
1966 Mos-lng-Projekt, Moscow
1965 Artist's House, Moscow
Energy Institute, Moscow
History Institute, Moscow
Usti-nad-Orlicy Theatre,Czechoslovakia (leaflet text: Dushan Konetchni)
1959 Mukhina Art Institute, Leningrad
.
Selected Group Exhibitions:
2003 "Yes do yourself...", Regeneration of Judaism in Israeli art, Zman Omanut Tel Aviv (cat: Gideon Ofrat)
1999 "Russian post-war avantgarde", The Trajsman Collection in the State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Tretjakov National Gallery, Moscow (cat. text: Yevgenij Barabanov, John Bolt...
Category
20th Century Modern Michail Grobman Art
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Michail Grobman art for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Michail Grobman art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Michail Grobman in screen print, lithograph, paint and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the modern style. Not every interior allows for large Michail Grobman art, so small editions measuring 10 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Constantin Terechkovitch, Camille Bryen, and Bruce Weinberg. Michail Grobman art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $950 and tops out at $2,500, while the average work can sell for $1,200.