Jump to content

Gideon Gechtman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gideon Gechtman
Born(1942-12-17)17 December 1942
Died27 November 2008(2008-11-27) (aged 65)
NationalityIsraeli
Known forsculpture
MovementIsraeli art

Gideon Gechtman (17 December 1942 – 27 November 2008) was an Israeli artist and sculptor. His art is most noted for holding a dialogue with death, often in relation with his own biography.

Biography

[edit]

Gideon Gechtman was born on 17 December 1942 in Alexandria, Egypt. He moved to the British mandate of Palestine with his family in 1945. He studied at the Avni Institute of Art and Design (1961–1962), Hammersmith College of Art (1968–1971), the Ealing School of Art, and Tel Aviv University (1975–1976).

After returning from London with his future wife singer/actress Bat-Sheva Zeisler, he created minimalistic art that was typical for that period. These works were described to "didactically demonstrate structural and figurative change in material and appearance."[1] Gechtman taught at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem (1972–1975) and the Art Teachers Training College of Beit Berl Academic College (1971–2008).

In 1973 Gechtman had his first solo exhibition in the Yodfat Gallery in Tel Aviv. The exhibition, named "Exposure", signified Gechtman's increasing interest in the connection between art and the biographic dimension. On the walls of the gallery were enlarged photographs of the body shaving process before the open heart surgery that Gechtman underwent in 1973. Also in this exhibition were real and fabricated documents regarding Gechtman's medical condition. At the closure of the exhibition Gechtman put up obituaries for himself in Israeli dailies Haaretz and the Jerusalem Post, as well as around his home in Rishon LeZion. Gechtman told later about the reactions: "Teachers from Bezalel said to me: 'Have you gone mad? You frightened everyone.'"[2] The obituaries were a returning element in Gechtman's art for years to come.

In 1999, he exhibited a remodelled hospital environment under the name Yotam, named after his son who had died.

Gideon Gechtman died of heart failure on 27 November 2008. He was 65.[3]

[edit]

Education

[edit]
  • 1961-62 Avni Institute, Tel Aviv
  • 1962-63 Ealing School of Art, London
  • 1968-70 Hammersmith College of Art, London
  • 1975-76 Tel Aviv University, philosophy and art history

Prizes

[edit]

Solo exhibitions

[edit]
  • 1973 – Exposure, Yodfat Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1984 – Givon Art Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1985 – Mitot, Kibbutz Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1988 – Preparation for Mausoleum No.1, Artists Studios, Jerusalem
  • 1992 – Israel Echo, Bograshov Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1996 – Chedva, Chelouche Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1999 – Yotam, Herzliya Museum of Art
  • 2001 – Etude, Chelouche Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 2001 – Infinite Regress, Wiensowski & Harbord, Berlin
  • 2003 – Chedva, Gideon and all the Rest, Artists House, Tel Aviv
  • 2003 – Haifa Museum of Art, Haifa
  • 2007 – Initial Concept, Petah Tikva Museum of Art
  • 2007 – Dead Line, Beit Kanner Municipal Gallery, Rishon Lezion
  • 2008 – Launching Apparatus, Chelouche Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 2012 – Butterflies & Pyramids, Chelouche Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 2013 – Gideon Gechtman, 1942–2008, Israel Museum, Jerusalem

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Ofrat G: Gideon Gechtman, works 1972-1986. Tel Aviv: Stavit, 1986. (in Hebrew)
  2. ^ Dana Gillerman (31 May 2007). אתם לא רואים שאני הולך באוויר [You don't see that I walk on air]. Haaretz (in Hebrew). Retrieved 20 August 2014.
  3. ^ Artist Gideon Gechtman passed away. Maariv 2008-11-28. Accessed 2008-11-28. (in Hebrew)[dead link]
[edit]

Museums and galleries

[edit]

General art websites

[edit]