Weil Shraga
S-16 People of Dead Sea Scrolls
$850
27.5 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 70 cm wide x 50 cm high Serigraph 1967
Shipping & Handling: $30
Like memories, the people of Qumran – givers of the scrolls, exist as in a dream. They are the shadows of history, mirages conjured up in the desert to be reminders of the inescapable past. They have become thin writings, immortal as their words. Their influence is pervasive as the desert heat. Weil suggests all this – evanescence as well as permanence, atmosphere and materiality, by using double images, fragmented color, and a range of warm hues that flicker like heated air.
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.
Weil Shraga
S-17 Writing of Dead Sea Scrolls
$850
27.5 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 70 cm wide x 50 cm high Serigraph 1967
Shipping & Handling: $30
In 1947, ancient manuscripts were discovered at Khirbet Qumran (near the Dead Sea). Scholarly disputation has continued since their discovery about the nature of the community which created these valuable documents. The structure of the community was outlined in one of the Scrolls entitled The Manual of Discipline: “The members were all Jewish and regarded themselves as the true Israel; they understood the history of Israel and the promises to the patriarchs as being fulfilled in them, the actually existing community.”
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.
Weil Shraga
S-18 Song of Songs
$500
27.5 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 70 cm wide x 50 cm high Serigraph 1968
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-19 Seasons I
$500
27.5 inches wide x 19.75 inches high 70 cm wide x 50 cm high Serigraph 1968
Shipping & Handling: $30
Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high,
And terrors shall be in the way;
And the almond-tree shall blossom,
And the grasshopper shall drag itself along
And the caperberry shall fail;
Because man goeth to his long home,
And the mourners go about the streets
Before the silver cord is shattered.
And the pitcher is broken at the fountain,
And the wheel falleth shattered into the pit. . . .
-Ecclesiastes 12:5-6
Here, Weil presents the prince of pessimism at his most pessimistic – all colors are muted as if a dark cloud has dimmed the light. The fallen leaves, the broken wheel, the ragged birds all testify to the sorrow of despair. Koheleth is elegiac poetry, born of the artist’s awareness that “all is vanity.”
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.