Home > Aviva Uri > GallArt.com > Untitled (from Ten Painters on War and Peace), hand signed lithograph
  • Untitled (from Ten Painters on War and Peace), hand signed lithograph by Aviva Uri

Untitled (from Ten Painters on War and Peace), hand signed lithograph by Aviva Uri

GallArt.com

Lithograph

1978

Edition Size: 190

Image Size: 25.5 x 19.5 inches

Sheet Size: 25.5 x 19.5 inches

Signed

Condition: Excellent

Details — Click to read

Lithograph in colors on arches paper. Hand signed and numbered by Aviva Uri Edition 115/190.

From the “Ten Painters on War and Peace” portfolio. Printed on May 10, 1978 to honor the 30th Independence Day of the State of Israel, edited by Dr. Haim Gamzu, published by Graphart Publishers, Tel Aviv.

Artwork in excellent condition. All reasonable offers will be considered.

About the artist: Aviva Uri was an influential Israeli artist. Born in Safed, she studied painting with David Hendler, with whom she later lived. During the 1950s she was influenced by abstraction, surrealism, and Chinese and Japanese drawing. In 1952, she received the Dizengoff Prize and in 1957 she exhibited her work at the Tel Aviv Museum. She was appreciated for her abstract scribbles that expressed anxiety and distress. In the 1960s she was involved in exhibitions of the Ten Plus group and returned to painting to express social and anti-war protest. The feeling of mourning in her works grew in the 1980s, with the Lebanon War and the death of David Hendler. She continued to innovate and influence other artists until her death in 1989.

$375.00

Buy

The Artist

Aviva Uri

Aviva Uri was an influential Israeli artist. Born in Safed, she studied painting with David Hendler, with whom she later lived. During the 1950s she was influenced by abstraction, surrealism, and Chinese and Japanese drawing. In 1952, she received the Dizengoff Prize and in 1957 she exhibited her work at the Tel Aviv Museum. She was appreciated for her abstract scribbles that expressed anxiety and distress. In the 1960s she was involved in exhibitions of the Ten Plus group and returned to painting to express social and anti-war protest. The feeling of mourning in her works grew in the 1980s, with the Lebanon War and the death of David Hendler. She continued to innovate and influence other artists until her death in 1989.

Read more

More prints at GallArt.com

View Gallery