Tel Aviv Museum of Art

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The Tel Aviv Museum of Art was established in 1932 in Tel Aviv, in the home of Tel Aviv's first mayor, Meir Dizengoff. It moved to its current location on Shaul Hamelekh street in 1971.

The museum houses a comprehensive collection of classical and contemporary art, especially Israeli art, a sculpture garden and a youth wing.

The Museum's Israeli Art Collection reflects the history of art in the British Mandate of Palestine and the State of Israel.

The Museum's collection represents some of the leading artists of the first half of the 20th century and many of the major movements of modern art in this period: Fauvism, German Expressionism, Cubism, Futurism, Russian Constructivism, the De Stijl movement and Surrealism, French art, from the Impressionists and Post- Impressionists to the School of Paris including works of Chaim Soutine, and key works by Pablo Picasso from the Blue and Neo-Classical Period to his Late Period, and Surrealists works of Joan Miro.

Figuring prominently in the collection are works by several modern masters, including Claude Monet, Camille Pissarro, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Paul Cezanne, Alfred Sisley, Henri Edmond Cross, Pierre Bonnard, Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani and Marc Chagall.

The Collection includes several masterpieces, among them the painting Friedericke Maria Beer, 1916 by the Austrian artist Gustav Klimt and Untitled Improvisation V, 1914, by the Russian master Wassily Kandinsky.

The Peggy Guggenheim Collection, donated in 1950, includes 36 works by Abstract and Surrealist artists, including works of Jackson Pollock, William Baziotes, and Richard Pousette-Dart, and Surrealists works by Yves Tanguy, Roberto Matta, and Andre Masson.

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The Tel Aviv Museum of Art is presently displaying several new ehibits including "Michal Rovner: Fields" which illustrates large-scale video works and installations there were shown in Venice and at the Jeu de Paume in Paris and "Disengagement" which depict both photographs and video works which revolve around the disengagement from Gaza and Israel's security fence. The exhibition, which seeks to present a wide spectrum of views, includes over twenty artists.

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