Michael Druks

Michael Druks
Born September 26, 1940
Jerusalem
Nationality Israeli
Known for Painting
Movement Israeli art

Michael Druks (1940) is a Jerusalem-born Israeli artist.

Biography

Michael Druks was born in Jerusalem Israel on September 26, 1940. He worked for the theater and organized courses on the Art of the Object at the Bezalel Art Academy in Jerusalem. He studied with two famous Israeli artists in 1959, and hosted group exhibitions related to the natural environment at the Tel Aviv Museum and Gordon Gallery.

Between 1960 and 1971, Michael Druks produced "Plus Air Pollution" Gordon Gallery Tel Aviv. Between 1968 and 1974, Michael Druks orchestrated several art exhibitions on man's relationship to the natural environment and modern art. In the November 1970 edition of the Jerusalem Post, author Meir Ronnen of "A Mildly Critical Environment" discussed Michael Druks Environment paintings and sculptures at the Billy Rose Sculpture Pavilion at the Israel Museum as a "mild piece of social comment in which the parts often exceed the value of the whole."

In 1970, Michael Druks received the Creative Artists Working Grant from the Sharett Foundation Fund and displayed a significant environmental sustainability art gallery at the Israel Museum of Jerusalem of Modern Art and Antiquities.

Between October and November 1970, Michael Druks had his Environmental Exhibition shown at the Israel Museum. In 1971, Michael Druks directly participated in the Concepts and Information Show at the Israel Museum of Jerusalem.[1] In April 2, 1971, Druks produced his "Delectable Sandwiches" Exhibit as a way of compressing together flat matter and aesthetics which created a series of sharp forms and bright colors in his paintings.

Awards and recognition

Education

Teaching

Exhibitions

(partial list)

See also

Visual arts in Israel

References

  1. Yona Fisher, New Trends Among Israeli Artists) Studio International v 183 no. 942 March 1972 p. 125
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