,, • 411.11111111111W ----- TEL AVIV-PARIS OF THE EAST 6—THE JEWISH NEWS . . Art Is Important Part o 'Everyday bfe in Israel • Friday, Oct. 1, 1948. By M- AXINE R. LEVIN Art Editor of The Jewish News. "Tel Aviv is the Paris of the East," so the soldiers and tourists report. Side walk cafes, theaters, concerts. and art- exhibitions. It all started some 20-odd years ago in Tel Aviv, with Jerusalem and Haifa following suit. Now the art activity in Israel is an important part of everyday living, from traveling art exhibits throughout the country to, private galleries, museums and public patronage. Credit for the art movement in Israel goes to the artists who in 1928, founded the "Association of Palestine Painters and Sculptors," and interested the first mayor of Tel-Aviv, Meir Dizengoff, who founded the Tel-Aviv museum, first housed in the upper floors of the mayor's home. In 1931, a simple modern structure was completed and the Tel-Aviv museum attract- Mrs. ed, world wide attention. Contributions were received from American and European artists as well as patrons, in partic- Exhibition Hall for Graphics at Tel Aviv Museum ular Maurice Lewin of Antwerp, who contributed many fine examples of Dutch art. Today, this quisite examples of candelabra, scrolls, altars, etc. `Art of the Written Word' museum shows many new exhibitions each month, are traceable to the art of the country in which has an art library of over 3,500 art books, thousands Primarily, I agree with Trude- Weiss-Ros- of prints, and is an integral part of the life of the marin, who has written a series' of articles stating the artist •a-bored. While there is no Jewish art, to my way of linking, there have been some fine city. that there., is no Jewish art. Dr. Weiss-Rosmarin The Bezalel Museum. points out that the true or traditional . art of the The Bezalel Museum, in the Rockefeller Build- Jews is the art df the written word. Those familiar Linesman ing in Jerusalem, functions primarily as an educa- with the writing and compiling'of the Bible, with (water color) the study of the Talmud and the oral law, must tional museum. This museum arranges traveling exhibitions, sponsors contemporary art and re- agred with her. By Boy cently completed an excellent exhibition of child- I have looked over the magnifiCent ceremonial Aged II ren's art of Palestine. Both museums feature art art in the. Jewish Museum in New York and come without regard to race, creed or time, although the Tel-Aviv museum stresses all art pertaining to the Bible. craftsmen among the Jews where Jews were per- Daily and weekly newspapers regularly print mitted_to enter the field of art, and today, where an art column, private art galleries in Tel-Aviv Jews are free to enter any field of art, there is a and Jerusalem hang many one-man shows. Haifa remarkable percentage of high attainment in the is fast becoming art conscious, opening many new fine arts, considering the numerical population of art galleries. world Jewry The pecular sunlight and atmosphere of Israel `A Source of Pride' provides quite a technical problem for the artist. That this new country of Israel is art conscious The glaring light, transparency of the rarified at- and is fast developing its own national artists, is mosphere and confusing visibility, where on an therefore no great, surprise, but it is a source of average -day, one can see as far as 50 miles, is most pride to us that the Jews of Israel are productive perplexing. First Rate Artists Despite the difficulty of painting in Palestine, a large number of first rate artists have appeared on the scene. Jacob Steinhardt, Rubin Zaritsky, Gutman, Melnikoff, Castel, Kahn, Marcel, Jancu, to name a few of the most prominent. Rubin, whose studio is in Tel-aviv, is well known in this country and abroad; his works are in private and public collections here in France. In The Tel Aviv's New Museum of Modern Art- . Designed by CARL RUBIN Orange Grove (water color) By Girl, away with a terrific sense of pride in the Jews as artisans, as craft workers of extraordinarily good taste and sincerity. But in none of the fine, tra- ditional pieces on view is there evidence of a true, pure strain of art that could be labeled typically Jewish in motive or character. Throughout the years the Jews have been influenced by the art of the country in which they lived. The most ex- Aged 13 in this field as well. Art is accepted in Israel as part of the education and life of the people, not as an intellectual interest of the chosen few. Here, again, is evidence of the energy and tenor of the people of this newest and youngest of all countries . New York Jewish Museum Fosters odern, Traditional Art of Judaism By LEONARD FINE family mansion to the Seminary in memory of her hus- band, her father, Jacob H. Schiff, and her brother, Mor- The Jewish Museum which is housed in the home timer Schiff. of the late Felix M. Warburg at Fifth Avenue and 92nd St., New York City, was opened to the public in May, The Museum's emphasis on the art of our own time 1947. Conducted by the Jewish Theological Seminary of is reflected in the space devoted to such an exhibit as America, the Museum represents one more phase of the that of Ben-Zion, whose paintings and drawings on Seminary's far-ranging program for acquainting Amer- biblical subjects recently occupied the entire first floor icans of a 11 faiths - of the Museum: with the beauty and The projected program for the coming year will dignity inherent in continue to stress the achievements of 20th century Judaism. figures in the arts." Early this fall an exhibit of paintings In the span of a lit- arranged in cooperation with the Congress of World tle more than a year Jewish Culture will be presented. This will be follow- since the Museum ed in the early winter with an exhibit of paintings by presented its inau- the late Isidor Kaufman who died in Vienna in 1921. gural exhibition. But ,the function of the Museum goes far beyond "The Giving of the the art of our . own day. Through its permanent collec- Law and the Ten tion of art objects, which date as far back as the 13th century, the .Museum is, in reality, an integral part of Comma n dments," the American educational system. Reflecting the his- more than 75,000 torical aspect of the Museum's activity during the cur- Americans from every rent season, a room will soon be opened to house an part of the United exhibit dedicated to the State of Israel. The new room will feature the art of old Palestine and of the new States a n d Canada State and will stand as a 'symbol of the cultural ties have viewed the im- between American Jewry and the Yishuv. pressive panor ama which symbolizes the Doming the late fall, the Museum will also hold a history of the Jewish broad scale -exhibit of its collection of Hanukah lamps people. with examples drawn from every age and every land. The Museum might The basic aim of the Museum is one which it has have remained an ad- followed since its inception and is probably best sum- junct of the Library marized By Doctor Louis Finkelstein, president of the had it not been for the JewiSh - Theological Seminary, who -said: "It is the pur- generosity of Mrs. 18th Century Russian Hanukah pose of the Jewish Mueum, that each book, art object, Felix M. Warburg. On and painting illustrate, in its own way, the singular Menorah, five feet high, at the Jan. , 14, 1944, Mrs. beauty of Jewish life, as ordained in the laws of Moses, Warburg donated the Jewish Museum. developed in the Talmud and embellished in tradition. ' ICopyright 1948, Seven Arts) "Eve of Sabbath in Safed" By NAHUM GUTMAN Rubin is one of the pioneers of modern art in Pal- , estine-, having studied there as a boy, returning early to make his • home in Israel. His many can- vasses interpret the shimmering light of the land- scape-in an individual manner, emotionally in appeal, brilliant in color. Modern Art Pioneer Marcel Jancu, of the abstract group, is another pioneer of modern art in Palestine. With broad and exciting line he has depicted the life and the people of Palestine, and his still-lifes of fruit and produce of the country are among the fine contri- butions to art. Castel is one of the newer artists, whose paintings are whimsical and sensitive, while Leo , Lubin and Elias Newman (now in this country) must be included in any listing of fine artists in Palestine. So there is plenty going on the field of art in Israel. While these men are all Jews, and painting the Jewish scene, they do not necessarily consti- tute any rejuvenation of Jewish art, nor do they make up a distinctive Jewish art.