Pann Abel
Jerusalem
$200
26.75 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 68cm wide x 50cm high Serigraph
Shipping & Handling: $30
Abel Pann was born in Lithouania.
He began his artistic studies in Odessa and continued them in Paris. A number of his pictures have been acquired by the French Government, by the Municipality of Paris, by the Museum of Luzembourg and by the Art Institute of Chicago and a series of 45 pictures has been purchased in America for the National Museum of Jerusalem.
The Palestine Art Publishing Co. Ltd Jerusalem
Abel Pann wrote:
The task I have set myself involves a serious responsibility. The enthusiasm which my work arouses in me is often clouded by painful doubts and questionings. For that same Book which has inspired many a genius to produce his masterpiece has proved to be beyond the reach of a far greater number of artists.
A son of the race which produced this marvelous Book. I feel that I, better than some others, may be able to seize its true spirit, and to communicate it to my fellow-men.
But the absolute truth is with G-d alone. Mankind is ever the subject to error. And so I entreat the indulgence of my judges.
Pann Abel
Joshef
$200
26.75 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 68cm wide x 50cm high Serigraph
Shipping & Handling: $30
Abel Pann was born in Lithouania.
He began his artistic studies in Odessa and continued them in Paris. A number of his pictures have been acquired by the French Government, by the Municipality of Paris, by the Museum of Luzembourg and by the Art Institute of Chicago and a series of 45 pictures has been purchased in America for the National Museum of Jerusalem.
The Palestine Art Publishing Co. Ltd Jerusalem
Abel Pann wrote:
The task I have set myself involves a serious responsibility. The enthusiasm which my work arouses in me is often clouded by painful doubts and questionings. For that same Book which has inspired many a genius to produce his masterpiece has proved to be beyond the reach of a far greater number of artists.
A son of the race which produced this marvelous Book. I feel that I, better than some others, may be able to seize its true spirit, and to communicate it to my fellow-men.
But the absolute truth is with G-d alone. Mankind is ever the subject to error. And so I entreat the indulgence of my judges.
Weil Shraga
S-23 The Ram
$400
18 inches wide x 22.5 Inches high 46 cm wide x 57 cm high Serigraph 1969
Shipping & Handling: $30
Shraga Weil was born in Nitra, Czechoslovakia in 1918 to a family of teachers, journalists and merchants. His father, a building engineer, who was an amateur painter, sent him to study with a local sculptor and then to the Prague School of Art.
He produced his first graphic works during World War II, part of which he spent as a prisoner. After the war, Weil sailed for Israel on an illegal immigrant ship, eventually arriving in the new country in 1947 and becoming a member of Kibbutz Haogen, where he has been living ever since.
In 1954 Weil spent some time studying murals and graphic techniques at the Academie des Beaux Arts, Paris and Ravenna mosaics with Prof. Severinl.
Shraga Weil’s works have been exhibited in the United States, South America, Canada, Australia, France, the USSR, Switzerland, and in the International Exhibition of Graphic Arts, in Lugano. In 1959, Weil was awarded Tel Aviv’s Dizengoff Art Prize.
Museums and Public Collections
Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts
Boston Public Library
Israel Museum, Jerusalem
William Rockhill Nelson Gallery, Kansas City, MO
Fogg Museum, Harvard University
Los Angeles County Museum
Jewish Museum, New York
Philadephia Museum of Art
Joslyn Museum, Omaha, Nebraska
Judah Magnes Museum, Berkeley, CA
Weil Shraga
S-103 Sketch Book
$500
25.5 Inches wide x 19.75 Inches high 65 cm wide x 50 cm high Serigraph 1970
Shipping & Handling: $30
After finishing his series of seven serigraphs (The Akedah) based on verses from the story of Abraham and Isaac, Weil proposed a kind of epilogye to this work. The print sums up the sense of relief and gratitude that Abraham must have felt upon the redemption of his son; the ordeal had ended and they were still both safe and alive.
Shraga Weil was born in Nitra, Czechoslovakia in 1918 to a family of teachers, journalists and merchants. His father, a building engineer, who was an amateur painter, sent him to study with a local sculptor and then to the Prague School of Art.
He produced his first graphic works during World War II, part of which he spent as a prisoner. After the war, Weil sailed for Israel on an illegal immigrant ship, eventually arriving in the new country in 1947 and becoming a member of Kibbutz Haogen, where he has been living ever since.
In 1954 Weil spent some time studying murals and graphic techniques at the Academie des Beaux Arts, Paris and Ravenna mosaics with Prof. Severinl.
Shraga Weil’s works have been exhibited in the United States, South America, Canada, Australia, France, the USSR, Switzerland, and in the International Exhibition of Graphic Arts, in Lugano. In 1959, Weil was awarded Tel Aviv’s Dizengoff Art Prize