Ziffer House: Documentation and Research
Center of Israeli Visual Arts
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1,
Harav Friedman Street, Tel-Aviv, Israel Tel. (972) -3-604-1167 Fax. (972) -3-602-094 E-mail address: ziffer@post.tau.ac.il Director:
Prof. Gila Ballas; Person in charge: Vardit Drori Opening hours: Sunday to Tuesday 9 - 13 Mailing address: Ziffer House, Tel Aviv University, Faculty of Arts, P.O.B. 39040 Ramat Aviv Tel Aviv 69978, Israel |
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| Moshe Ziffer - Sculpture Garden in Safad |
The Ziffer House
In 1984 the late sculptor Moshe Ziffer and his wife
Rachel bequeathed their home in Harav Friedman 1 St., Tel Aviv to the Yolanda
and David Katz Faculty of Arts of the Tel Aviv University as a documentation
and research center of Israeli art. In 1993, after long restoration works highly
respecting the original plans of the building, the Ziffer House opened its
gates for regular activity.
The ground floor, formerly the
artist's studio, houses a permanent representative exhibition
of Ziffer's work as well as documentary
material on his life and work. This large hall is also used
for lectures and assemblies. The mezzanine floor houses the offices and
archives, and on the upper floor are the library, study and reading room
and a small cafeteria.
The center provides services to students, lecturers,
researchers, curators, artists and art critics in Israel and from abroad.
Its library is also accessible to high school and art school students and
to individuals interested in various aspects of Israeli painting and sculpture.
The Documentation Center is a scientific
oriented center under the supervision of the Art History Department of the
Tel-Aviv University. Unlike other documentation and archive centers, this
center does not deal only with the collection and preservation of
documentary material but rather initiates fieldwork and promotes research
in a scientific and methodical manner in view of further extensive
research.
The subjects covered at the center include: the
history of Israeli Visual arts (painting, sculpture, photography, installation,
video art etc.) from the turn of the century until the present day; the work of
individual artists; the activities of groups and societies of artists as well
as artists colonies and centers (Safed, Ein-Hod, etc.) One man shows and group
exhibitions in Israel and abroad, art schools, museums, galleries and
private collections as well as general issues such as relations of artists and
their societies with the establishment in its various manifestations,
involvement of artists in society and the state; ideological and aesthetic
questions, history of art criticism in Israel, relationship with
other fields of art, historical, regional and international influences on
Israeli art, etc. Besides, the Ziffer House handles bequests from deceased
artists at the request and with the support of their families. This
includes photographing and recording the works in a card index, as preparation
for a catalogue raisoné; arrangement of documents (letters, manuscripts,
newspaper clippings) and filing them in the artist's file; recording the books,
pictures and/or reproductions of the work of other artists that were found in
the artist's studio and home. This detailed work is carried out by graduate and
undergraduate students. The students are guided and supervised by the
center's academic staff.
The bequest of the sculptor Moshe Ziffer, and the
fund created by Mr. John Porter in order to provide the basic charges of the
house, helped create the appropriate objective conditions for advancing and
developing the scientific documentation of the plastic arts in
Israel. Such documentation is essential for deepening and expanding
serious research, and only the involvement of an academic institution can
insure that such research is conducted at a level worthy of its name. In order
for the center to be able to fulfill its intended function, it requires
resources that the university, in its present economic straits, is unable
to provide. The future activities of Ziffer House, as well as that of the
scientific oriented research in Israeli art, depends to a large extent on
the generosity of supporters and donors both in Israel and abroad.
Ziffer's House in Tel-Aviv serves as the central
archive and research source of Israeli plastic art. The first floor, in what was
Ziffer's studio, now houses a retrospective exhibit of his works; on the
middle floor are the office and archives; and the top floor features the
library and study area. The data files and research material have been
organized under the supervision of Prof. Gila Ballas, who also acts as Director
of Bait Ziffer in coordination with the Department of Art History of Tel-Aviv
University. Bait Ziffer is open to students, lecturers, researchers, art
critics and curators as well as to artists and followers of Israeli
art. In addition to the study facilities in Bait Ziffer, visitors may also
photocopy or photograph the various documents and reproductions.
Gila Ballas / Moshe Ziffer The Man and the
Artist
"His
work is simple and noble as the man who created"
Prof.
Albert Einstein
Moshe Ziffer was born on April 24, 1902 in the town
of Przemysl, Galicia, and died in Tel- Aviv on April 9,1989. His father was an artistically gifted
self- taught master builder and plasterer. Ziffer studied in a Polish gymnasium but at home was raised
in the spirit of Zionism. He began
to study Hebrew at the age of six, and was a member of the Zionist Youth
Movement Ha'Shomer Ha'tzair. He was sent by the Pioneers' organization for
training in preparation for Aliya (emigration to Eretz Israel) for which
purpose he studied carpentry for three months. At the age of 17 he left home. Following a long journey
through Germany, Austria and Trieste, he finally arrived in Jaffa-Tel-
Aviv. For about three years he
worked at various jobs in Kastina, including construction of the Haifa -
Gedda road. In November 1922 he joined Kibbutz Beit Alpha where he worked
at a variety of jobs, mainly construction carpentry. The turning point in his
life occurred in 1924, when he fell ill and was bedridden for a
long period. It was then that
he began reading, in German, Mereszkowski' s book on Leonardo da Vinci, which
inspired him to start carving figures from the blocks of wood available in the
kibbutz workshop. In October,
1924, after a brief stay in Jerusalem (where he worked as an assistant to the
sculptor Melnikov) he left for Vienna to convalesce and began to study
sculpture at the Kunstgewerbe Schule ( the School of Arts and Crafts) under
the sculptor Steinhof. This fortunate choice was to
influence his future as a sculptor.
Prior to World War I, Steinhof had spent in
Paris several years and had close connections with local artists
who belonged to the avant garde movement. A
photograph of one of his sculptures in the French journal "L'Art Vivant" shows a great
resemblance to the works of Archipenko and Gargallo. As a teacher Steinhof gave
the highest priority to the developing of his students, opposing the
conventional academic methods of imitation and copying, and elaborating
instead innovative and modern methods.
Under his guidance the students began by working upon
"abstract" basic forms, which to his way of thinking were "the
only ones that permitted an elementary perception of intrinsic laws". After this, and in order to
prevent an over enthusiasm for abstraction, they continued by learning to
make vases, for the vase form both excels in absolute purity and has a
meaning that is universally understood.
In this way, the students attained technical skills and high
standards of execution while learning to ignore minor details, and look
instead for the essential lines and observe the play of light on form. In the second phase of their studies
the students modeled geometric forms in plaster and engaged in constructing
architectural models while paying special attention to the harmony of
cubes. The third phase was one of
refinement and emotional expressiveness and included the study of colors
through designing rugs and mosaics.
It was only in this latter phase that the student finally reached the
moment, which for Steinhof was the most critical: that of a return to
nature. It was only now that they were ready to sculpt the human figure without
the aid of a model.
Steinhof's teaching method is most important to an
understanding of Ziffer's work. It was this method which established the source
of the simplicity and purity of line in his figurative sculptures, from
which we can follow his development to abstract sculpture in the mid-1950s as a
natural and obvious progression, rather than a mere following of
fashion.
During his studies in Vienna Ziffer modeled many
large clay sculptures (using the vertebrae method) as well as works in
stone and wood. He revealed a
complete mastering of all these techniques, and when he exhibited 23 of his
sculptures at the Holbein Gallery (October 1928) his work was widely
acclaimed. About a year earlier
(in the spring of 1927) Ziffer had travelled to Paris with Steinhof and accompanied
him on his visits to the studios of SteinhofÕs friends Brancusi and
Gargallo. His meeting with
Gargallo left a deep impression on Ziffer. He felt that Gargallo's sculptures contained an element,
which was missing in his own: a very deep knowledge of nature; that is to say,
of the human body. Consequently, despite the great success of his exhibition,
Ziffer decided to travel to Berlin in order to complete his studies at the
Academy of Art under the instruction of the sculptor Edwin Scharff. Only after painful struggles with the
medium and the models did he return to working without models and combine his
own original style with his basic and more profound familiarity with the
structure of the human body. He
sculpted in stone, two nude female figures, which were critically acclaimed by
the Academy of Berlin. When he was
forced to leave Germany in April 1933, Ziffer gave one of these sculptures to
Albert Einstein, who supported him, both financially and morally, during his
three years of study in Berlin.
Ziffer's other sculptures remained in Berlin, and their whereabouts are
unknown.
Upon his return to Eretz Israel, Ziffer lived in
Jerusalem, where he supported himself by teaching and continued to create
decorative sculptures, especially female nudes. He is said to have been influenced by Maillol, but in
fact Ziffer met Maillol only after he had established his own personal
style, and his affection for Maillol was rooted, rather, in his feeling a
closeness to his work. Ziffer himself admitted that because he was not
interested in anatomy, he was more able to deal with pure form and to work with
greater simplicity. Ionel Jianou
rightly points out that contrast to the power, the energy and the monumentalism
which characterize Maillol's work, the excellence of Ziffer's female nudes lies
in their simplicity and dreamy tranquility, which radiate sensitivity. In 1937 Ziffer again traveled to Paris where he
remained until September 1939.
During this stay he became acquainted with a number of Jewish painters
and sculptors who belonged to the School of Paris and was held in high regard
by both artists and critics.
On the eve of the outbreak of World War II, Ziffer
returned once more to Eretz Israel and to teaching, first in Jerusalem and then
in Tel-Aviv. Over the years
he created various large-scale models commissioned for the then Palestine
and later Israeli pavilions at international exhibitions (Brussels in 1938, New
York in l958); for parks and public buildings (including the Weizman Institute,
the Hebrew University and the Haifa Technion); as well as memorial reliefs
and monuments throughout the country (Kibbutz Hulda, Netanya, Kibbutz Netzarim
and Ain Gedi.
Beginning in 1934, Ziffer paid regular summer
visits to Safad, a city he cherished since 1921 when he lived there while
to recuperating from malaria. In 1959 he began the restoration of an abandoned
l8th century building which included a Turkish bath and which had
been given to him by the Safad Municipality. In the large hall of the bath, whose dome rises to a height
of 8 m., the artist arranged a permanent retrospective exhibit of his
sculptures. With time, he began to tend to the surrounding garden, where he
gradually began to display his large sculptures. These had been designed
with a view to creating harmony and balance, even by contrast, with the nearby
Mt. Meron. Ziffer in this way began using nature as a component in his
art. Every sculpture had its own
reason for being. Eventually,
Ziffer's sculpture garden in Safad became an extensive and unique
work, created by the artist from the stone terraces and the surrounding
greenery to the sculptures themselves.
These sculptures blend harmoniously with the landscape and provide a
statement of man's presence amid the wondrous wilderness of the Galilee.
All of the works in the garden are "abstract"
in the sense that they do not, in any way, imitate forms and figures that exist
in nature. They are
self-sufficient forms. In fact, since exhibiting his abstract sculpture
("Keshet" - "Arc" - l954) in the Gan Ha' Em in Haifa,
Ziffer ceased to be a figurative sculptor. For him abstract sculpture was a natural return to his
beginnings, to the basic problems of plastic form. Simple forms, the play of
light and shadow, formal tension based on contrasting directions, which
lead to universal harmony - these are the problems that had always occupied
Ziffer. "I work with
light," he said. "This
is my colour." In his works
he realized the high ideals absorbed from his Viennese teacher - a complete and
perfect synthesis of hand and spirit.
Ziffer's House in Tel-Aviv serves as the central
archive and research source of Israeli plastic art. The first floor, in what
was Ziffer's studio, now houses a retrospective exhibit of his works; on
the middle floor are the office and archives; and the top floor features
the library and study area. The data files and research material have been
organized under the supervision of Prof. Gila Ballas, who also acts as Director
of Bait Ziffer in coordination with the Department of Art History of Tel-Aviv
University. Bait Ziffer is open to students, lecturers, researchers, art
critics and curators as well as to artists and followers of Israeli
art. In addition to the study facilities in Bait Ziffer, visitors may also
photocopy or photograph the various documents and reproductions.
Pictures:
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Ziffer's House - Library and reading
hall |
Ziffer's House - the Gallery |
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Moshe Ziffer - Sculpture |
Moshe Ziffer - Sculpture Garden in
Safad |