Tuesday, 15 October 2013

A mysterious artist, Issai Kulvianski

'My parents shtetl'
The information about the work and life of Issai Kulvianski is not easy to find. After a couple of research and documentation, I still cannot say that I know 35% of his story. 
He appears under different names: either Izaijas Kulvianski or Isaja Kulwianski. He was born in Jonova, Lithuania, in 1892. He studied first sculpture at the Vilnius Art School and later at Berlin, in 1912, at the Berlin Academy of Art. Later, he went to Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he got in touch and eventually was influenced by Soutine and Chagall. Before the WWI, when he served in the Russian Army, he was member of the semi-anarchist group in Berlin 'Novembergruppe', together with, among others, El Lissitzky. 
In 1933, he moved to the then Palestine, where for around 17 years was a teacher of arts at a school he created. One of his paintings of that time of the Tel Aviv beaches  continue to be an appreciated presence in the auction houses. The next stage of his life was of a permanent travel, especially in Europe. His stops included Nurenberg, Oudeuil/Oise, Val de Mercy/Yonne before establishing in London, where he spent the rest of his life.
His works are strongly influenced by the neo-realism, one of his inspiration being the German painter Lovis Corinth.
Many of his works can be found either in different auction houses in Europe or in museums and galleries. 

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