TRAVEL Art And II IN ACtIVIS111 The paintings of Joel Rohr capture all aspects of Israel. RUTH ROVNER Special to The Jewish News ,- -D eated in his gallery in Jerusalem, where the stone walls are cov- ered with his paint- ings, Joel Rohr recalls how unexpectedly his career as an artist began over 60 >---' years ago. Back in 1927, he was 15 and living in New York after ) his family emigrated from Poland. Attending school on the Lower East Side, he could barely speak a word of Eng- lish. So he sat uncomfortably and restless in the classroom. "To keep me occupied, my teacher gave me a paper and crayons, and I started to draw," Mr. Rohr recalls. "I sat in class and made drawings all day. One day the teacher looked at them and asked, `Would you like to go to art school?' " The young artist was to be- come one of Israel's most prominent painters. Joel Rohr, who settled in Is- rael (then Palestine) in 1945, ) has had his works exhibited all over Israel and the Unit- ed States. He was the first Israeli in- vited to the National Muse- um of Mexico, and he represented Israel in "Expo 67" in Montreal. He's also ex- hibited in varied museums and art centers including the prestigious Museum of Mod- ern Art in New York. The paintings, wherever they've been shown, have fo- L cused on one ma- jor theme: Israel. Capturing his country on can- vas, rendering its m000ds, its geography, history and beauty, has always been his goal. "I even changed my style from abstract to realism so that people would really know that they were looking at Is- rael, and so that they would be reminded of the history of our people," says the artist. He's a slender man with keen blue eyes and white hair, who is friendly and welcoming to visitors. He's nearing 80 now, and he still paints every day. His gallery on Yemin Moshe Street, just steps from the historic Montefiore wind- mill in Jerusalem, is open to visitors, and there are many who stop in to admire the oil paintings, serigraphs and watercolors. There are paintings of David's Tower and the Jerusalem hills, of orchards and olive trees, desert and sea. In his book The Israel Land- scapes and People are 86 reproductions of his work. They include the artist's view of the cactus (the sabra) and cyclamen, Eilat Bay, the Tim- na copper mines, Haifa Bay, Masada, the Negev, the vineyards of Ein Gedi. There are many scenes of kibbutz life, painted from first-hand experience. For many years the artist and his Artist Joel Rohr in his Jerusalem studio. Photo by Ruth Rovner family lived on Kibbutz Kfar Menachem. "Because I believed in this kibbutz, I chose it as the main theme for my paintings," says Mr. Rohr, who joined the kib- butz movement while he was still in New York City. Years later, when he and his late wife Etta finally had the chance to immigrate, they went straight from the boat to the kibbutz. "I was even more surprised than I expected to be," says Joel Rohr. "Until I saw it, I didn't realize how far advanc- ed the kibbutz life was in terms of the brotherhood of mankind." Mr. Rohr participated fully in that brotherhood, getting up at sunrise, working as a farmer, sharing in the com- munal chores. Late at night, he did his painting and sent them off to the gallery in New York which still represents him. When the paintings sold — and they always did — he turned the proceeds over to the kibbutz. In time, the kib- butz members realized he was more valuable to them as an artist than as a field worker, and he was released from agricultural duties to paint and to teach art in the kib- butz high school. His paintings also deal with Israel's history — and this, too, is something he knows from first-hand experience. As a young man he joined the Haganah, the Jewish defense force. He fought in the War of Independence (1948), the Six- Day War (1967) and the Yom Kippur War (1973). "To think that I'm still alive — it's a miracle!" marvels Mr. Rohr. Jerusalem is a recurrent theme in his work. In 1968, he opened a studio in the Yemin Moshe artists' colony in Jerusalem. He was one of the pioneer artists who started the colony. "The idea was to have a creative community and Mayor Teddy Kollek helped to start it," explains Mr. Rohr. Yemin Moshe, which is now a picturesque area between the Old City and the new, was the first Jewish community built outside of the walled Old City. By the time Mayor Kollek got the idea for an ar- tists' quarter, it had fallen in- to disrepair. That's why artists were in- vited to settle in the area. For a fee, they were given a house to live and work in, provided that they would also under- take the repairs. "When I got it, the place was mostly in ruins," recalls Mr. Rohr. He renovated it and later built an addition for his studio and living quarters. Of the 25 founding artists who first started Yemin Moshe as an artists' colony, Joel Rohr is one of five who have stayed. In back of the gallery, which is open to visitors and where Mr. Rohr is on hand to meet them personally, is his studio, a large and airy space with a drawing table. Paintings are all around. Symbols of Israel, images of Israel, hopes for Israel — all this he has conveyed on can- vas during a lifetime of painting. The desire to share his country with others has always been the prime motivation of his art. "I try to express myself," he says, "so that everybody can unders- tand my people, my country, the land around me." ❑