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Esther Eliashiv | |
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אסתר אלישיב | |
![]() Esther Eliashiv,
Tel Aviv, Israel | |
Born | Esther Slor 11 December 1930 |
Citizenship | Israeli |
Education | The Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem, Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma in Rome |
Occupation(s) | Painter and sculptor |
Website |
esther |
Esther Eliashiv ( Hebrew: אסתר אלישיב) (born 11 December 1930) is an Israeli painter and sculptor, who has exhibited her works on 4 continents.
Esther Eliashiv is a 4th generation Israeli born in Petah Tikva, at the time Mandate Palestine.
Esther served in the Israeli Navy in Haifa during the war of independence. Thereafter she got certified as an art teacher and during the year 1952 held a position of teacher of arts and crafts at P.I.C.A. School, Petah Tikva.
Esther studied at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem from 1953 to 1956 under the tutelage of contemporary artists Jacob Pins, Mordecai Ardon, Isidor Ascheim and Yitzhak Danziger, consequently in a continued education program at the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology. Having attained a scholarship for advanced art studies in Europe and U.S.A. she traveled in 1956 to Paris, France and later on to Rome, Italy where she studied till 1958 at the Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma. Esther got married in 1957 with Israel Eliashiv an Israeli diplomat who was serving in the Embassy of Israel in Rome at that time.
Married to an Israeli diplomat, the Israeli artist Esther Eliashiv's career has taken her to five countries on four continents where she has created art works and presented one-woman exhibitions in Israel, Canberra and Melbourne Australia (1962- 1967), Yokohama and Kobe Japan (1989), Singapore (1968-1972 and 1987-1990), Geneva and Bern, Switzerland (1977- 1982), and New York, U.S.A (1972- 1975 and 1993-1996).
In 1996 Eliashiv returned to Israel where she still lives and continues to create art, working on creating large oil paintings, combined in two or three large canvases. She lives with her husband in Tel-Aviv, has 3 children and 8 grandchildren.
Esther Eliashiv's creativity started at a very early age, taking art courses to feed her passion, additionally drawing and painting on paper and large terra-cota vases.
Throughout her career, Eliashiv has held numerous exhibitions in different countries; Australia, Singapore, USA, Switzerland, Japan, and Israel [1]. [2]. The first solo exhibition was held at the Ben Uri Gallery in Melbourne, Australia, opened by late Prof. Zelman Cowen [1] [3] [4], who later became Governor-General of Australia. She held a solo exhibition in the Habima Gallery in 1983, opened by the late President Shimon Peres [5] [6], prior to his second term as Prime Minister. Eliashiv was the first Israeli Woman Artist to exhibit paintings in Japan [7] and during her showings at the Sogo Galleries in Japan in 1989, she was interviewed by Japan T.V, where they had displayed some of her works.
Eliashiv held a one–woman exhibition of paintings at the United Nations, opened by the Assistant Secretary General of the U.N. and representative of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York [8]. During the years 1972-1975 Eliashiv acquired a strong foundation in printmaking and sculpture at the Art Students League in New York and in private workshops. She has since created numerous sculptures in bronze and terra-cota. Some of the sculptures are aimed at large bronze versions in monumental bronze and other materials.
In 1975 Eliashiv opened a studio gallery at the Hutzot Hayotzer in Jerusalem for a couple of years [9], expanding her artistic endeavors in Israel, exhibiting her works and collaborating with other artists in mixed media. In 1975 Esther Eliashiv had a joint exihbition with Māris Bišofs, award winning international caricaturist and illustrator, and in 1977 Eliashiv hosted a group exhibition with Jacob Pins with his known woodcuts [1]. Her art works can be found in private collections.
Eliashivs works are semi-abstract paintings which express the mysticism of the Scriptural stories; "In addition to powerful feelings, there is an intriguing mystic quality in her paintings expressed very skillfully through the portrayal of light" [10], "They are small treasures: the depictions float like pieces of jewelry in a fairytale-like oriental background" [11]. The subject matter of Eliashiv's work is drawn from stories in the Hebrew Scriptures, such as "Jacob's Dream" and "Adam and Eve", or "Tree of Life” a theme that recurs throughout her career [12] [10] [13] [14] [15] [9] [4].
Category:Living people
Category:People from Petah Tikva
Category:Jews in Mandatory Palestine
Category:Israeli Jews
Category:Modern painters
Category:Israeli contemporary artists
Category:21st-century Israeli women artists
Category:20th-century Israeli sculptors
Category:Israeli women artists
Category:Israeli sculptors
Category:Modern sculptors
Category:Contemporary sculptors
Category:Jewish sculptors
Category:Jewish artists
Category:Jewish Israeli artists
Category:Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design alumni
Category:1930 births