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Joseph Weiss
Boats in Harbor Israeli Modernist Cubist Abstract Oil Painting Rare Kibbutz Art

About the Item

Colorful mid century vibrant abstract scene of boats in harbour. Signed and titled in Hebrew recto and titled and signed in Hebrew and English verso. Joseph Weiss, Painter, Sculptor, Woodcuts. b. 1916, Romania. Immigrated 1939 to Israel. Member of Kibbutz Evron. Studies: Klug, Romania, painting and graphics; advanced studies, Oranim Art Institute, Tivon; with Dada founder Marcel Janco and Zvi Mairovich. He was a Romanian-Austrian-Israeli painter producing mainly color woodcuts and sculpture, who was born at Romania in 1916. The First Exhibition of Israeli Graphic-Art, Museum for Modern Art, Haifa. 1967 Artists: Micha Ullman, Jakob Steinhardt, Jacob Pins, Noemi Smilansky, Miron Sima, Mordecai Moreh, Rudi Lehmann, Rudolph Moshe Tamir, Joseph Weiss, Moshe Gat, Michael Gross, Isidor Aschheim. Awards and Prizes: Devorah Davidson Prize, 1961 Hermann Struck Prize, 1965 Diploma of Excellence, Art Addiction, Miniature Art, Stockholm, 1997 Certificate of Merit, Art Addiction, Graphic Art, Stockholm Diploma of Excellence, Internet Art 2000, Venice & Stockholm, 2000 Diploma of Excellence, Art Addiction, Miniature Art, Stockholm, 2002 Espresso at last! The Café Arabia on Kohlmarkt Jewish Museum Vienna (Judenplatz) VIENNA AUSTRIA MAY 25, 2022 - OCT 23, 2022 Café Arabia opened in 1951 on Vienna’s Kohlmarkt, in the middle of the city center. It imported the Italian espresso culture into the traditional coffee-making metropolis, which caused heated debates. Equally spectacular was the coffee house’s demise: In 1999 it had to give way to a boutique, which both regular guests and architecture connoisseurs regretted. The history of the café and its founder, the entrepreneur Alfred Weiss (1890–1973), has meanwhile faded into oblivion and is now to be brought back into consciousness. “Arabia” had already been the name of the coffee and tea import company that Weiss took over after the First World War and turned into a successful and popular brand in the interwar period. Joseph Weiss, the well-known graphic artist (creator of the Meinl logo, among others) and friend of Alfred Weiss, designed one of the first corporate identities for him, featuring the distinctive capital “A.” In 1938, the company was “Aryanized,” and the Weiss family had to flee. The daughters survived in England, Alfred and his wife Lucie in Rome following an odyssey through Europe. After the Second World War they returned to Vienna. From Italy they brought along what they had seen blossoming there: the new technique for preparing espresso coffee. Weiss managed to get his import company back. The Arabia name became one of the major coffee brands again in the post-war decades. Weiss commissioned the architect Oswald Haerdtl with the design of the espresso café, who realized it as a total work of art. He also acquired Palais Auersperg in 1953 and made it – also based on Haerdtl’s designs – into the company headquarters “Haus Arabia” and a lively event center. Thanks to his energy and fearlessness, Weiss did not shy away from facing the unreasonableness and contradictions in post-war Austria. He associated with the leaders of domestic politics in the Second Republic and worked both with Haerdtl, who had collaborated with the National Socialists during the war, and with the graphic artist Heinrich Sussmann, who had survived Auschwitz. For many years the visible center of his work was and remained Café Arabia and the Arabia brand.
  • Creator:
    Joseph Weiss (1916 - 2003, Israeli, Romanian)
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 23 in (58.42 cm)Width: 29 in (73.66 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    size includes frame. frame has wear.
  • Gallery Location:
    Surfside, FL
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU38213058392
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