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David Avidan

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File:David Avidan by Yael-Sahar Sarid.jpg
"David Avidan", painting by Yael-Shahar Sarid, 1994.

David Avidan (Hebrew: דוד אבידן)(February 21, 1934 – May 11, 1995) was an Israeli "poet, painter, filmmaker, publicist and playwright" (as he often put it). He wrote twenty published books of Hebrew poetry, and is one of the most prominent and influential poets in Israeli history.

Biography and literary career

He was born in Tel Aviv, Israel, and studied Literature and Philosophy at the Hebrew University, but did not graduate. He wrote mostly in Hebrew, and was an avant-garde artist throughout his life. He translated many of his own poems into English, and received several awards both as a poet and as a translator.

He was not popular with most critics or the general public throughout his life. He was condemned as egocentric, chauvinistic and technocratic. His first book, "Lipless Faucets" (1954), was attacked by nearly all poetry critics; the first favourable review was by Gabriel Moked, editor of the literary quarterly "Akhshav", and later one of Avidan's closest friends.

The quality of his later poetry was seen as inferior to that of his early works,[by whom?] although critics in favor of postmodern and experimental trends in poetry disagree.[citation needed]

Public interest in him diminished year by year. By the early 1990s he could scarcely make a living, and his mental condition had deteriorated. David Avidan died in Tel Aviv, the city which had played a central role in his life, and was, in many ways, the center of his creation.

Since his death, Avidan's reputation has been on the rise both in literary circles and in the popular imagination, positioning him as one the core poets of the Israeli canon.

Awards

In 1993, Avidan was the co-recipient (jointly with Amalya Cohen-Carmon) of the Bialik Prize for literature.[1]

Books (poetry) - partial list

  • Lipless Faucets, 1954
  • Personal Problems, 1957
  • Subtotal, 1960
  • Pressure Poems, 1962
  • Something for Someone, 1964
  • A Book of Possibilities - Poems and More, 1985

References

  1. ^ "List of Bialik Prize recipients 1933-2004 (in Hebrew), Tel Aviv Municipality website" (PDF).

Further reading

See also