|
|
Nachum Gutman (1898-1980)
Artist, Author, and Illustrator
The son of an author, Nachum Gutman was born in Bessarabia and moved
to Eretz Yisrael as a child. He grew up in Yaffo, opposite the sand dunes
later to become Tel Aviv, and these locales dominate his landscapes. He
was one of the first children to live in the new city of Tel Aviv, and
this influential childhood experience is recounted in his books A
Small City with Few People and Between Sands and Blue Skies .
Gutman served in the Jewish Legion in World War I, and then went to Europe
to continue his education in art that he had begun at Bezalel; he returned
to Eretz Yisrael in 1926. Influenced by Henri Rousseau and Matisse, his
paintings exhibit a sense of innocence and nostalgia for life in the early
days of the Yishuv*. Gutman worked primarily in oils, gouaches, and water
colors. His oil paintings are known for their large blocks of pure, unmixed
color, and his water colors are clear, evoking a transparency akin to
the innocence he wished to convey. Gutman is also famous for his illustration
of Bialik poems and for mosaics he designed in Tel Aviv: in the Shalom
Tower, the Chief Rabbinate Building, and the old City Plaza.
Gutman began his work as a children's illustrator in the 1920's, and
he continued to work in children's literature throughout his career. For
thirty-two years he illustrated a children's weekly, and frequently included
stories of his own. As an author he is simple and direct, displaying a
cheerful, optimistic view of life. Gutman explained that he strove to
excite in his young readers a curiosity about the world around them and
to encourage them to use their imagination, particularly in order to see
the hidden wonder in the commonplace. Gutman was one of the first authors
to write for children in Hebrew, and for his contribution to children's
literature, a field which he helped launch, he was awarded the Israel
Prize in 1978.
[Top] [People]
[ Zionist Century] [Homepage]
|
|