Mordechai Geldman
Mordechai Geldman | |
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Occupation | Poet, Art critic, Journalist, Photographer, Psychologist |
Mordechai Geldman (Template:Lang-he; b. 1946) is an Israeli artist, author, poet and psychologist.
Biography
Geldman was born at a Displaced Persons camp in Munich[1] to Polish parents who had survived the Holocaust.[2] His family immigrated to Israel in 1949[3] and settled in Tel Aviv, where he has lived ever since.[2] He completed a bachelor's in literature and an master's in clinical psychology at Bar Ilan University.
Geldman spent six years in residency as a psychotherapist. He later established a unit for the selection of managers at Pilat management services and served as a clinical psychologist at the IDF center for the evaluation of senior officers. He is currently an independent psychotherapist using psychoanalytical methods.
Geldman's poetry is philosophical, psychological, and existentialistic. It combines literary Hebrew and everyday language, even some slang. He published 11 poetry books and 6 non-fiction books, winning the Chomsky Prize for Poetry in 1983, Prime Minister Prize in 1996, Brenner Prize in 1997, Amichai Prize in 2004,[4] and Bialik Prize in 2010.
As a visual artist Geldman is engaged in plastic arts, ceramics and photography. His photographs were exhibited at such places as the Tel Aviv Museum of Art. Geldman was an art critic of the Israeli daily Haaretz, and treasured exhibitions for many Israeli artists.
Publications[5]
Poetry
- Sea Time, Land Time (1970)
- Bird (1975)
- Window (1980)
- Songs 1966-1983 (1983)
- Milano (1988)
- Eye (1993)
- Book of Ask (1997)
- Time (1997) with art by Moshe Gershuny
- Mourning Songs (2000) with art by Pesach Slavosky
- Oh My Dear Wall (2000)
- The Heart's Poem (2004)
Non-fiction
- Dark Mirror (1995)
- Psychoanalytic Criticism (1998)
- Eating Fire, Drinking Fire (2002)
- The True Self and the Self of Truth (2006)
- In the Silver Mirror: Bianca Eshel Gershuny (2007)
- Sharon Landscapes: Helen Berman (2009)
References
- ^ Moked, Gabriel, ed. (1989). "Mordechai Geldman". The Tel Aviv Review. 2: 355.
Mordechai Geldman, born in a DP camp in Munich, was brought to Israel in his early youth. He is a clinical psychologist who also writes art criticism.
- ^ a b Bargad, Warren; Chyet, Stanley (2002). No Sign of Ceasefire: An Anthology of Contemporary Israeli Poetry. Wayne State University Press. pp. 109–110. ISBN 0970429525.
After the Second World War Geldman's parents moved from Poland to Germany.
- ^ "Mordechai Geldman". Literary Review. 26: 284. 1982.
Mordechai Geldman, born in 1946 in Germany, emigrated to Israel in 1949. He lives in Tel Aviv, where he works as a clinical psychologist.
- ^ Keller, Tsipi (2008). Poets On The Edge: An Anthology Of Contemporary Hebrew Poetry. New York: SUNY Press. pp. 185–197. ISBN 978-0-7914-7686-4.
- ^ "Mordechai Geldman". The Institute for the Translation of Hebrew Literature. Retrieved 2010-06-15.
External links
- 1946 births
- Bialik Prize recipients
- German Jews
- German immigrants to Israel
- Hebrew-language poets
- Israeli artists
- Israeli Jews
- Israeli non-fiction writers
- Israeli people of Polish origin
- Israeli poets
- Israeli photographers
- Israeli psychologists
- Israeli psychotherapists
- Living people
- People from Munich
- People from Tel Aviv
- Polish expatriates in Germany
- Polish Jews