Batia Lishansky | |
Native Name: | בתיה לישנסקי |
Birth Place: | Malyn, Russian Empire |
Death Place: | Tel Aviv, Israel |
Nationality: | Israel |
Occupation: | Sculptor |
Batia Lishansky, also Batya, Batyah; Lichanski, Lishanski, (1900–1992) was a Russian Empire-born pioneering Israeli sculptor. Working with stone, wood and bronze, she created portraits and memorials commemorating the people and events of the early years of the State of Israel. Her many busts portray cultural and political figures as well as members of her family while her monumental memorials are dedicated to those who were killed in the War of Independence. Many of her works can be seen in the permanent exhibition at the Shomer Museum in Kfar Giladi.[1] [2] [3]
Born in Malyn, Russian Empire, in 1900, Batia Lishansky was the youngest of the four daughters of Shoshanna (1865–1944) and Meir Yonah Lishansky (1862–1942). After immigrating to Palestine with her mother in 1910, she studied for a year at the Bezalel Institute under Boris Schatz. She then spent a period at the Rome Academy of Fine Arts but returned to Palestine in 1921, settling at the Ein Harod kibbutz and exhibiting her early wood sculptures. In 1923, she went to Berlin where she studied for three years before spending a further three years at the Academy of Painting and Sculpture in Paris. She returned to Palestine in 1929.[1] [4]
Batia Lishansky died in Tel Aviv in 1992.[1]
In a style ranging from expressiveness to realism, her early works were influenced by Auguste Rodin and Camille Claudel.[4] Among the hundreds of busts she created of historic Israeli figures are those of prime ministers David Ben-Gurion, Menahem Begin and Golda Meir. However, she is known above all for her memorials, including Commemorating the Fallen for those who died in the War of Independence (1947–1949). Depicting heroism and comradeship, the series of three can be found at Kfar Yehoshua, Beit Keshet and Kadoorie Agricultural Village. Her memorial "From Holocaust to Revival" is located at Netzer Sereni.[1] [3]
Lishansky received the Dizengoff Prize for her contributions to sculpture on two occasions: in 1944 and 1957. In 1986, she was honoured with the Israel Prize for Lifework in Sculpture.[3]