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  • Mûzêʾôn Erets-Yiśrāʾēl  (6)
  • Merkaz Bẚuhẚus 〈Tel-Aviv〉  (4)
  • Tel Aviv  (10)
  • Stuttgart : Kohlhammer
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 104, XII Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 1984
    Keywords: Spiel ; Ausstellung
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  • 2
    ISBN: 9659060602
    Language: English
    Pages: 90 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2003
    Keywords: Tel Aviv ; Neues Bauen
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  • 3
    Language: English
    Pages: 121, [23] Seiten , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2004
    Keywords: Bildjournalist ; Ausstellung
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  • 4
    Language: English
    Pages: 171, 69 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2014
    Keywords: Israel ; Kunst ; Textilien ; Ausstellung
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  • 5
    Language: German
    Pages: 193, XLVII Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2018
    Keywords: Rings, Josef ; Mendelsohn, Erich ; Neues Bauen ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Die Architekten Josef Rings (1878–1957) und Erich Mendelsohn (1887–1953) stehen beispielhaft für zwei Vertreter der architektonischen Moderne in Deutschland und später im Exil in Palästina, deren Lebenswege und beruflichen Karrieren einen Einblick in die Vielgestaltigkeit der biographischen und professionellen Situation unter den politischen Prämissen der ersten Hälfte des 20. Jahrhunderts geben. Gemeinsam war ihnen, dass sie als angesehene Architekten und Planer den Zenit ihres beruflichen Erfolges parallel zum sich entfaltenden Bauhaus erreicht hatten und durch den Machtantritt der Nationalsozialisten gezwungen waren, Deutschland Richtung Palästina zu verlassen. Beiden gelang es hier, sich erneut in ihrem Beruf zu etablieren und weiterhin größere Projekte zu verwirklichen. Obwohl Rings und Mendelsohn Modernisten waren, repräsentieren sie inhaltlich wie formal jedoch ein unterschiedliches architektonisches Schaffen. Etwas plakativ könnte man sie als Vertreter der das letzte Jahrhundert prägenden Ideologien von Sozialismus und Kapitalismus bezeichnen. Der Sozialist Rings widmete sein Werk dem Wohl der Arbeiterklasse, entwarf Arbeitersiedlungen und urbane Pläne zur Verbesserung der Lebensqualität der Massen. Er baute nach dem Ersten Weltkrieg in Essen und dem Ruhrgebiet neue Siedlungen, u.a. für den Allbau die Eyhof-Siedlung, Feldhaushof und Heimatdank, sowie die Festhalle (Alte Grugahalle). Weitere Bauten der Moderne errichtete er in Gelsenkirchen für die Siedlung Spinnstuhl und für den Bergbau allgemein. In Palästina plante er Arbeitersiedlungen und war auch in der Stadtplanung tätig. Der bürgerliche Mendelsohn dagegen realisierte Kaufhäuser, vornehme Villen für deren wohlhabenden Besitzer, sowie Großprojekte wie Spitäler, Universitäten, Banken etc. In Essen baute er 1932 das Jüdische Jugendheim an der Ruhrallee (siehe das neue Baumodell in der Dauerausstellung) und den Mosse-Pavillon auf der „Pressa“ in Köln. Beide verließen ihr Exilland nach wenigen Jahren wieder: Mendelsohn emigrierte schon 1941 in die USA und Rings ging 1948 zurück nach Deutschland, wo er in Mainz eine Professur annahm. Der Katalog, der in der Reihe des Bauhaus Centers Tel Aviv erscheint, wird ca. 200 Seiten und ca. 180 Abbildungen umfassen. Für die Publikation konnten anerkannte Wissenschaftler als Beiträger gewonnen werden, die das Werk beider Architekten und den historischen Kontext ihres Schaffens in Deutschland und im Mandatsgebiet Palästina eingehend beleuchten.
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  • 6
    ISBN: 9789659060658
    Language: English
    Pages: 148 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2009
    Keywords: Israel ; Werkverzeichnis ; Architektin
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  • 7
    Language: English
    Pages: 165, 43 Seiten , Ill.
    Year of publication: 2007
    Keywords: Textilien ; Kleidung ; Parochet ; Goldstickerei ; Ausstellung ; Jüdisches Kunsthandwerk
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  • 8
    Language: English
    Pages: 32, 112 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2003
    Keywords: Textilien ; Kleidung ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: What do Desert Embroidery, Lifeline for the Old, Almaz, Lakiya, and Mini Gifts have in common? They are all cottage industries created and run by women that employ immigrants to create ethnic products based on crafts learned in their native lands. In fact, Ruth Dayan can be credited with creating cottage industry of ethnic works in Israel. In the early 1950s, Dayan's job was to place agricultural counselors in the newly-settled moshavim [agriculture-based communities] in order to train the new immigrants from countries includingYemen, Iraq, Morocco and Iran. Such training would enable the newcomers to make a living off the land. Early on, Dayan saw an opportunity that was about to be missed: these immigrants had brought with them little else but the traditions of craft and handiwork from their native countries. She persuaded the authorities to support her vision of nurturing cottage industry in order to create ethnic products by newcomers. On Moshav Avdon, for example, immigrants from the Azerbaijan region in Iran designed strong-colored rugs in floral motifs. These same designs were transformed into more modern designs by painter Jean David. In 1954 the Dept. of Vocational Training at the Ministry of Labor established a company aimed at encouraging home industries, coordinating and distributing raw materials required for such industries, and marketing the products in Israel and abroad. The first products were implemented at Kfar Uriah, where intricate embroidery was sewn into collars and cuffs. WIZO was the marketing arm of the project which was originally called Eshet Chayil [Woman of Valor]. Dayan understood that in order to succeed, the products would need to meet modern-day design standards and fashions. Among the designers who turned the homespun items into fashionable, well-designed and saleable products were Fini Leitersdorf, Siona Shimshi, Tamara Yovel-Jones, Shula Litan and Oded Burla. Guiding principles behind the products were excellent design, natural materials, and limited editions. This was an excellent opportunity, and often a first step, for young Israeli designers to showcase their work. The government of Israel originally financed and supported Maskit in order to meet the dual goals of assisting those who had no other skills than their native land crafts, and create an original Israeli style. Now defunct, Maskit was eventually bought by private investors.
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  • 9
    Language: English
    Pages: 156, 44 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2011
    Keywords: Israel ; Puppe ; Souvenir ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: National costume dolls as a socio-cultural phenomenon are part of popular a culture that began before the establishment of the State of Israel, and came to its end in the late 1980s; its halcyon days were between the 1950s and the 1970s. These dolls were made by artists, artisans and craftspeople who used an array of techniques and styles, typically employing straightforward methods. Most of the doll makers and designers were not born in the country; some of them had had art or artisan education and others had a modicum of knowledge of the field. The dolls were displayed and sold privately, in souvenir shops or in shops owned by institutional bodies such as WIZO, Maskit and Hameshakem. They were bought as souvenirs, mementoes of a place or an experience, by Israelis and particularly Jewish tourists who took them home with them after they left the country, a scrap of their national homeland in the shape of ornamental dolls that depicted local types, later to be put on display in their faraway homes. In retrospect, the repertoire of these national costume dolls evokes memories, and perhaps even yearning. However, the exhibit seeks to expand the scope beyond the nostalgic context and regard these dolls as a symbolic unit that conveys messages and meaning about the period, and the changes that took place over seven decades. The dolls in this exhibit manifest symbols, values and myths that relate to the creation of Israeli identity: nationality, ethnicity, the melting pot, pluralism and multiculturalism. Presenting and interpreting the doll collection will draw the boundaries of representation and reveal the figures that are included, as well as those which are not. The exhibit attests to the tension embodied in the dolls, while attempting to answer the question: did these dolls - created over the years -reflect, represent, shape or invent the sought-after imagined and hegemonic Israeliness?
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  • 10
    ISBN: 9659060629
    Language: English
    Pages: 120 Seiten , zahlr. Ill., Kt.
    Year of publication: 2006
    Keywords: Bauhaus ; Architektur ; Ausstellung ; Jaffa
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