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Alva ( continued,1901-1973)

Painter and graphic artist Alva (né Siegfried Solomon Alweiss) was born into an observant Jewish family to traditional Galician parents in Berlin, Germany on 29 May 1901; he lived in Galicia until the age of ten. After leaving school, he began a career in commerce, then studied music at Stern’s Konservatorium, Berlin (1919–1925), before turning to art, legally adopting the shortened form of his name, ‘Alva’, in 1925, studying painting in Paris in 1928 and exhibiting at the Salon d’Automne. In 1934 he travelled in Palestine, Syria, and Greece, and held his first solo exhibition in Tel Aviv the same year. Following Hitler’s accession to the German Chancellorship in 1933, Alva became ‘stateless’ after his passport was cancelled since neither of his parents was German. He returned to France and from there fled to London in 1938. In the same year, he completed a symbolic painting, Exodus, which references both the ancient biblical account of the departure of the Israelites from Egypt and the artist’s own ‘forced journey’ from Germany. The anonymity of the figures evokes the systematic mistreatment of an entire race under the Nazi regime and the wider displacement of war.

In 1940, following the introduction of internment for so-called ‘enemy aliens’, Alva was briefly interned on the Isle of Man, where he produced a number of internment drawings. After his release a monograph by Maurice Collis ‘Alva, paintings & drawings’ was published in 1942; a second title by Collis, of recent paintings and drawings, published in 1951 had a foreword by the British art historian Herbert Read. In 1944 Alva was included in the opening exhibition at the Ben Uri Gallery’s new Portman Street premises, and this initiated his relationship with the gallery which included a lecture in November 1948 on ‘The Purpose of Painting’, in which he claimed inspiration from Rembrandt and Daumier among others; he also participated within group shows at the gallery on numerous occasions including in 1949, 1950 and 1956. He held solo exhibitions at the Waddington Galleries, London in 1958 and the Leger Galleries, as well as elsewhere in continental Europe, Israel, the USA, and South Africa.

Both his painting and graphic work moved between figuration and abstraction in a broadly expressionist style and often engaged with his Jewish faith. His graphic work included illustrating and decorating a version of the first chapter of Genesis and producing a series of studies of the Prophets in lithograph serigraphs. He also contributed illustrations to Yiddish publications in London between the late 1930s and 1940s, including the cover design for Y.A. Liski’s ‘Produktivizatsie’ (Productivisation), printed by East End printer Israel Naroditsky in 1937 ‘For, du kleyner kozak!’ (On Your Way, Little Cossack!) in 1942, and the cover illustration to Malka Locker’s ‘Shtetl’. He painted portraits of Locker and the Yiddish poet Itzik Manger, among others, as well as symbolist paintings on Jewish life.

Alva died in London, England on 13 November 1973, the year that his autobiography, ‘With Pen and Brush: The Autobiography of a Painter’ was published. His work is held in UK collections including the Ben Uri Collection. His work has been shown at Ben Uri on many occasions including in exhibitions in 1988, 1998 and 2017, and was among the Ben Uri collection loans to the exhibition ‘Achievement: British Jewry’, curated by Charles Spencer, at Camden Arts Centre, London, in 1985.

www.ftn-books.com has the Female Form book now available again

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Han Yajuan (1980)

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Sorry…..no this is not an Istagram post by a chinese influencer , but the portrait is of Han Yujuan.

韩娅娟
As part of the post-1978 generation, Han Yajuan (born 1980) is concerned with China’s socio-cultural transformations and new materialistic trends. Her works mostly employ a cartoon style based on Japanese anime, and explore the multi-dimensions of women’s lives.

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Han Yajuan was born in Qingdao in 1980. She obtained the Bachelor of Fine Art at Oil Painting Department of China Academy of Art, and master’s degree at Central Academy of Fine Arts. She has lectured in the School of Media and Animation of China Academy of Art, and attended short-term study in Royal College of Art in Britain. Now she lives and works in Beijing and Hong Kong. She has held numerous solo exhibitions worldwide, including: China, USA, UK, Japan, Netherlands, Italy, Australia, Spain and Turkey. Her works have also participated in over a hundred national and international group exhibitions, including: “Story about the Orient-Art Invitational Exhibition of Asian Youth” in National Art Museum of China; “Go Figure! Contemporary Chinese Portraiture” at Australia National Portrait Gallery and Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation; “Future Pass” toured in Palazzo Mangilli Valmanara in Venice, Rotterdam Wereldmuseum, National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts and Today Art Museum in Beijing. Han Yajuan’s work primarily deals with issues of female identity and self-awareness, she was ranked 7th in Reuters’ “The Hot-Young-Artists League Table”, and can be counted amongst some of the worlds’ most prestigious private and institutional art collections, such as The Uli Sigg Collection, CAA, and M+Museum.

www.ftn-books.com has the scarce Yujuan catalogue from her exhibition at Kerseboom Modern art now available.

yajuan a

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Yves Klein (1928-1962)

Yesterday i learned from a dutch TV program (DWDD / De Wereld Draait Door) that there is a large Yves Klein retrospective in the BOZAR museum Brussels.

Yves Klein , touched many currents in Modern Art, even was one of the participants in ZERO, but eventually developed a style of his own using in many of his works the iconic BLUE color he developed. Was it zero, action painting or performance art? Today art lovers around the world can not answer these questions , but one can see for one self what fits most, because there is a great retrospective on his art in BOZAR/ Bruxelles until the 20th of August. His monochrome blue paintings are on show together with his action paintings of blue prints of female bodies. A great show and possibly a once in a lifetime chance to see many important Yves Klein works together.

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Nowadays Klein paintings fetch record prices at auctions all over the world, but in one of his first shows In Krefeld in 1961 nothing was sold. This was followed by an unsuccessful opening at Leo Castelli’s Gallery, New York, in which Klein failed to sell a single painting. He stayed with Rotraut Uecker at the Chelsea Hotel for the duration of the exhibition; and, while there, he wrote the “Chelsea Hotel Manifesto”, a proclamation of the “multiplicity of new possibilities.” In part, the manifesto declared:

At present, I am particularly excited by “bad taste.” I have the deep feeling that there exists in the very essence of bad taste a power capable of creating those things situated far beyond what is traditionally termed “The Work of Art.” I wish to play with human feeling, with its “morbidity” in a cold and ferocious manner. Only very recently I have become a sort of gravedigger of art (oddly enough, I am using the very terms of my enemies). Some of my latest works have been coffins and tombs. During the same time I succeeded in painting with fire, using particularly powerful and searing gas flames, some of them measuring three to four meters high. I use these to bathe the surface of the painting in such a way that it registered the spontaneous trace of fire.

To prepare your self for the exhibition, know that over the decades excellent books on Klein were published. There are some available at www.ftn-books.com