Nahum Gutman was one of Israel's most well known
artists.
His body of work was broad. He worked in a variety of
media including oils, watercolors, gouache, sculpture,
mosaics and engravings. Born in Telenesty, Bessrabia, he
immigrated to Eretz-Israel in 1905 with his parents at
the age of seven.
Gutman was truly a product of his environment and one
the students who rebelled against the European way of
painting at the Bezalel (art academy). Hemi Gutman, the
artist's son, a professor of biophysics at Tel Aviv
University, explained that when his father attended
Bezalel, all the teachers were of European decent. Their
entire treatment of subject matter was based on European
landscapes and even on European lighting. The group that
rebelled, believed that the different landscape in
Israel, one in which summer days are often gray and
filled with blinding light (from dust) required a new
and different treatment.
The museum dedicated to Nahum Gutman opened just last
year, in a building known as the Writer's or Editor's
House. It is the result of what Hemi Gutman described
as, "15 years of blood sweat and tears". Only a small
portion of the permanent collection of several thousand
works are on display at any given time. Located in the
Neve Zedek, area of Tel Aviv (see Route #1, Orange
Routes article) the building was originally built in
1887 in one of the first neighborhoods outside of Jaffa.
It housed the editorial board of the `Ha'poel Ha'tzair'
(Young Laborer) newspaper between 1907-1914 and was home
to Y.H. Brenner, Dvora Baron and Joesph Aharonovitz.
Hemi Gutman said that his father loved people and
never did or looked at anything from a superior
standpoint. He noted that while most people tend to
equate his father's work with optimism, his father also
saw the bad. A new exhibition, opening this December,
titled "Gutman in the Land of Evil", will clearly show
that Gutman did in fact see the darker side of life. The
new exhibition will showcase works never before seen by
the public. These works deal with pogroms, the
holocaust, etc.
Gutman was not only preoccupied with painting
(illustration) but with writing as well. In fact, many
knew him best for his drawings and illustrated
children's books. He once wrote, "This person (myself)
occupies himself, as it were, in two lines of work, but
in truth only does what his heart desires, namely one."
Gutman wrote and published prose, mostly short stories
and children's tales, on which generations of Israeli
children were raised. He was the recipient of numerous
prizes and in 1978 received the Israel Prize (Israel's
highest accolade), for his contribution to children's
literature.
Describing his father's work, Hemi Gutman said, "He
didn't have just one style of painting. He switched from
the figurative style to one which started having more
abstract elements, but not because he was trying to copy
anyone." In fact, during the 1950's when Israeli
painting seemed to be in a crisis and there were those
who advocated adopting the International style in order
to lose the local stigma Gutman wasn't swayed and was
true to the local style.
In a catalog from the museum's first exhibition, the
artist's son wrote, "The most difficult moment in my
father's art was parting with it. The house was full of
new and old paintings. My father liked their proximity,
they seemed to remind him of the good moments in life.
These selected moments have been compiled to populate a
museum dedicated to Nahum Gutman."
And a charming museum it is.
The museum is located at 21 Rokach Street, Neve
Zedek, Tel Aviv, 65148 03/5161-970, 03/510-8554 TEL
03/516-1981 FAX
Visiting Hours: Sunday-Wednesday 10:00 AM - 4:00 PM
Thursday - 10:00 Am 7:00 PM Friday - 10:00 Am - 2:00 PM
Saturday - 10:00 AM - 5 PM
Entry fees: Adults, 15 NIS/pp, Children and Senior
Citizens, 10 NIS/pp Groups (of 20 or more) 10 NIS/pp
Guided tours for groups are available in Hebrew, English
or French - 20 NIS/pp
http://www.gutmanmuseum.co.il/