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Original HAND SIGNED Jewish PEN DRAWING Bezalel ARTIST YOSSI STERN Hebrew ISRAEL

$ 50.16

Availability: 42 in stock
  • Religion: Judaism
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Condition: Very good condition. No tears or creases. Removing the ORIGINAL DRAWING out of a frame for authenticating has left tiny marks at the perimeter ( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images )
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Handmade: Yes
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: Israel
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer

    Description

    DESCRIPTION
    :
    Up for auction is a vintage HAND SIGNED and INSCRIBED Jewish unframed ORIGINAL DRAWING depicting a young seated Jewish woman ( Wearing a Magen David necklace ) crying for an unknown reason.
    The ORIGINAL PEN DRAWING
    was painted by the Israeli painter of Hungarian descent , The BEZALEL SCHOOL OF ART in JERUSALEM Artist YOSSI STERN ( Also Jossi - Joseph ) . Hand SIGNED in English "JOSSI STERN" with a personal inscription "  To SHARONA with FRIENDSHIP". The paper dimensions are around 8.5" x 12"
    . Very good condition. No tears or creases. Removing the
    ORIGINAL DRAWING
    out of a frame for authenticating has left tiny marks at the perimeter ( Pls look at scan for accurate AS IS images )
    . The piece will be sent in a special protective rigid sealed packaging .
    PAYMENTS
    :
    P
    ayment method accepted : Paypal.
    SHIPPING
    :
    Shipp worldwide via registered airmail is $ 25 .
    The piece will be sent in a special protective rigid sealed packaging
    .
    Handling around 5 days after payment.
    Jossi Stern, Hungarian/Israeli (1923 - 1992)  Jossi (Joseph) Stern was born far from his present world, in the Bakon Hills of Hungary, in 1923. He was already drawing when at the age of ten he moved with his family to Budapest. When Hitler's bestial horror with its promise of death sounded in 1939, the young artist made for Palestine in an old ship, only to be declared an illegal immigrant and sent to a prison camp for six months. In 1943, there were those who saw his talent and he was enrolled in the Bezalel school of Arts and Crafts in Jerusalem. Outstanding as a student, he became a teacher of Graphic Arts there.Stern is recognized in Israel as one of its most delightful artists. His drawings are exhibited and appear in many publications. They are the man and his world. Their grace and charm show that he has understood Gustave Flaubert''s remark: "If your work of art is good, if it is true, it will find its echo and make its place."Stern, a Holocaust survivor from Hungary, put special emphasis in his drawings on depicting the “new Jew,” a sabra, wearing shorts, sandals and looking tough.But along with his popular drawings, particularly for children books and the press, Stern slowly earned a place as a serious painter whose work was known worldwide. He was also a popular art teacher at the Bezalel Arts Academy here. Stern died Saturday morning, after a month of hospitalization. Following a second heart attack, he sank into a coma, from which he did not wake up. Seven years ago, at the age of 62, Stern made news by coming out with a surprise announcement that he was homosexual. “I was never in a closet, and therefore I never came out of it,” he told the Israeli daily Yediot Achronot during an interview. “I have always treated the intimate part of life discreetly. Whoever asked, I always told the truth, but people didn’t ask,” he said. Rumor had it that he had a long affair with the American conductor Leonard Bernstein. Stern did not deny this but hated the fact it had become a rumor, stressing that he wanted to keep his private life private. “There are three men whom I go to bed with every night,” he used to say. “Marcus Aurelius, Baruch Spinoza and Martin Buber.” But his openly admitted love affair was with Jerusalem. Mayor Teddy Kollek named him “the Painter of Jerusalem.” Stern spent many long hours painting the city that he loved. He used to spend hours on end, walking along the streets, the alleys, swallowing the city in his mind, and then come home and record his impressions on canvas. Loved by so many, in a way he was always an outsider. He has never had an exhibition at the Israel Museum, on the hill across the valley from his home. He had few exhibitions abroad. But so many books are illustrated with his drawings, so many walls in Israel carry a Yossi Stern. He had, in fact, become an integral part of Israeli culture, perhaps more than he realized. ungary, 1923 – Jerusalem, Israel, 1992 Yossi Stern is acclaimed for his illustrations which he created for many newspapers, books and publications in Israel. He was a master aquarellist, draughtsman, photographer and oil painter. He immigrated to Israel in 1939to escape the Holocaust but was declared an illegal immigrant and spent six months in a prison camp. He studied art at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, the Royal Academy of Art in London and on his own in Paris. He was Professor of Graphic Arts at the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design, a position hes held for more than twenty years. Yossi Stern, known as “the Painter of Jerusalem” and one of Israel’s foremost artists, died Saturday at age 69. Stern, a Holocaust survivor from Hungary, put special emphasis in his drawings on depicting the “new Jew,” a sabra, wearing shorts, sandals and looking tough. But along with his popular drawings, particularly for children books and the press, Stern slowly earned a place as a serious painter whose work was known worldwide. He was also a popular art teacher at the Bezalel Arts Academy here. Stern died Saturday morning, after a month of hospitalization. Following a second heart attack, he sank into a coma, from which he did not wake up. Seven years ago, at the age of 62, Stern made news by coming out with a surprise announcement that he was homosexual. “I was never in a closet, and therefore I never came out of it,” he told the Israeli daily Yediot Achronot during an interview. “I have always treated the intimate part of life discreetly. Whoever asked, I always told the truth, but people didn’t ask,” he said. Rumor had it that he had a long affair with the American conductor Leonard Bernstein. Stern did not deny this but hated the fact it had become a rumor, stressing that he wanted to keep his private life private. “There are three men whom I go to bed with every night,” he used to say. “Marcus Aurelius, Baruch Spinoza and Martin Buber.” But his openly admitted love affair was with Jerusalem. Mayor Teddy Kollek named him “the Painter of Jerusalem.” Stern spent many long hours painting the city that he loved. He used to spend hours on end, walking along the streets, the alleys, swallowing the city in his mind, and then come home and record his impressions on canvas. Loved by so many, in a way he was always an outsider. He has never had an exhibition at the Israel Museum, on the hill across the valley from his home. He had few exhibitions abroad. But so many books are illustrated with his drawings, so many walls in Israel carry a Yossi Stern. He had, in fact, become an integral part of Israeli culture, perhaps more than he realized. EBAY3752