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Joseph Kossonogi

Ihre Vorschau von der Schriftart Middle Saxony Text

BIOGRAPHY

 

Joseph Kossonogi (1908-1981) (variant names Yosef Kossonogy, Yossef Kossonogi) was an Israeli painter, born in Budapest, Hungary. After studies at the Berlin Academy of Art and advanced studies in France, Holland, Italy and Spain, he immigrated to Palestine and settled in Tel-Aviv in 1926. There he formed the collective of young painters known as Massad.

In 1929, the Massad group had its first exhibition and, in 1935, the group's members joined the Israel Association of Painters and Sculptors. Kossonogi had one-man shows at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art in 1944 and 1954, and, in 1950, won the Dizengoff Prize for his paintings of the sea. In 1956, Kossonogi joined the Artists' Colony in Safed. In 1958, the former president of France Vincent Auriol began collecting his work. Kossonogi won the Histadrut Prize in 1966 and the Nordau Prize in 1976. He settled in Safed in 1956 and died in 1981.

Colour figures strongly in Kossonogi's oeuvre. He was preoccupied with the bright sun of Eretz Israel and its effect on the lands, crops, and lives of Jewish settlers and native Arabs. Israeli art critic Gideon Ofrat writes of the artist's oeuvre: "Kossonogi launched his career with romantic watercolours rich in brown and green staining; subsequently, under the influence of Raoul Dufy, they grew lighter and focused on the poetical effects of transparency and fluidity." Kossonogi's focus on light and colour was likely inherited from the European influences that marked his formative period, notably Henri Matisse and André Derain. Along with important Israeli watercolourists Mordechai Avniel and Shimshon Holzman, Kossonogi was considered a master of the aquarelle medium.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Kossonogi

 

 

 

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