Israeli ART Bracha Guy's Teatime. A Nitza Flantz life study. Bracha Guy Born in Israel in 1948, Bracha Guy studied at the Avni Institute of Art in Tel Aviv between 1970 and 1974, and began exhibiting in a series of one- woman and group shows both in Israel and in the U.S. shortly thereafter. Her work usually depicts women in the home, and features bright, primary colors. Her style is highly ornate, filled with intricate detail and obsessive patterns. She has said of her work, "I have a yearning to cover the world with beauty, to create and infuse it with life. Transforming the figure of a woman into a creative work is a kind of dream, an idea of fantasy, like rolling a stone from the top of a mountain and seeing where it goes." No matter how innovative and orig- inal it may be, though, Tarkay's work has been criticized for a lack of con- tent and seriousness. "It's pure dec- oration, it has nothing to do with art," says Bernie Pucker, owner of the Pucker Gallery in Boston, a gallery which represents many Israeli artists, but not Tarkay. "He works out of no tradition, no commitment to either his own interest, or his heritage or histo- ry. It's only in creating things that will look good, to match the sofa and the drapes." "Tarkay is more the commercial artist," says one fine arts gallery owner, "It troubles me when an artist doesn't grow and change. Some of his customers have said they have too many in their collection. "They are tired of looking at women sitting at tables." And Peter Mitchell, general man- ager for Har-El North America, the North American distributor of David Schneurer's prints and originals, claims that Tarkay's work is deriva- tive both of Schneurer, an Israeli artist whose paintings of cafe scenes remain popular in the U.S. and else- where, and of Barbara Wood, an American artist who has painted col- orful images of women at leisure for years. In response to the criticism, Tarkay says, "Am I a serious artist? I don't know. You have to ask this 20 or 30 years from now, when I'm at the end of my career. But I can tell you this, I don't paint my paintings to be nice in Mitza Flantz Nitza Flantz, 49, began painting watercolors of women about 10 years ago, not long after returning to Israel from a four-year sojourn in Australia. Since then, women, both clothed and unclothed, have been the subject of much of her work — a factor which has inevitably led to comparisons with Tarkay, despite her softer palette. Recently, Ms. Flantz has began to paint flowers rather than women. "I'm sick of all the imitators with female figures," says the artist, who has shown in both Germany and the U.S., and is a frequent exhibitor at Artexpo in New York. "I started with my females many years ago, and I'm really one of the first to deal with Nitta Flantz this subject. But now everyone is doing it." your eyes. It's because that's how I like to paint. For me I do it. It's not economical, it's not for money, or any- thing like that." 0 Horde Of Imitators T arkay's success didn't go unno- ticed by other Israeli artists. A year or so after his work burst onto the U.S. market, a number of Is- raeli artists began to show work at fairs such as Artexpo that had a dis- tinctly "Tarkayesque" look, including the use of vivid color and the portrayal of cafe scenes. Artists like Itzchak Maimon, Nitza Flantz, and Zule are all now working in a similar tradi- tion, and meeting with considerable success in the U.S. and abroad. Many of these painters deny that Tarkay influenced their styles. Zule, a 58-year-old Argentinian emigre whose cafe and street scenes are more old-fashioned and muted than those of Tarkay's, had not seen the younger artist's work when she took up paint- ing 10 years ago. "Maybe the colors are similar, but the people I paint are moving and vi- brant," says Zule, whose work, now published by Renaissance Fine Arts, is sold in about 30 galleries in the U.S., and about 15 in England. "I think what [Tarkay] paints is a lit- tle different." Bracha Guy, an artist who executes images of women with an emphasis on pattern and color, had painted in that style long before Tarkay came on 0, 0) CO 2 UJ CD 29