Dora Gad Explained

Dora Gad
Birth Date:1912
Birth Place:Câmpulung, Romania
Nationality:Israeli
Occupation:Interior designer
Known For:Israel Prize

Dora Gad (Hebrew דורה גד; b. 1912, d. 31 December 2003)[1] was an Israeli interior designer, whose work had significant influence on the development of modern Israeli architecture.

Biography

Dora Siegel (later Gad) was born in Câmpulung Moldovenesc, Romania. She grew up in the home of her grandfather, and attended Hebrew school and a government-run school. Between 1930 and 1934, she studied at the Technische Universität in Vienna, and received her diploma in engineering and architecture. There she met her future husband, Heinrich Yehezkel Goldberg, an architecture student. They married in 1936, immigrated to Mandatory Palestine and settled in Tel Aviv. In 1959 she married Ephraim Ben-Artzi, a former general and public figure.

Interior design career

Gad began her career in the office of architect Oskar Kaufmann. In 1938 she began to work independently. In 1942 she began to design private apartments together with her husband. Her style was light and modern, drawing from local inspiration; abundant light, and local building materials. Gad incorporated locally available fabrics, wool carpets, woven work, straw and felt in her designs. Her style set her apart from many European educated architects of the day, who maintained more European styles of architecture.[2]

By the 1950s, the couple were already prominent interior designers in Israel. They were involved in the planning of many government buildings and institutions.

After the death of Yehezkel Gad in 1958, Gad established a partnership with Arieh Noy, an employee in her office. The Gad-Noy firm continued to work on governmental projects, and they were responsible, in 1965, for the design of the Israel Museum, together with architect Al Mansfeld, and in 1966, for the interior design of the Knesset building.[3]

The Gad-Noy firm operated until 1976. Gad continued to work independently in both the public and private sectors until her death, in 2003.

Notable projects

Awards and recognition

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.imj.org.il/artcenter/defaultH.asp?artist=272327&list=%D7%92 Dora Gad (in Hebrew)
  2. Book: Sheḥori, Ran . Dora Gad: the Israeli presence in interior design . 1997 . אדריכלות ישראלית . 965-222-754-4.
  3. https://www.knesset.gov.il/building/architecture/eng/art1_interior_eng.htm The official Knesset website
  4. http://www.mouse.co.il/CM.articles_item,1018,209,29459,.aspx (Hebrew)
  5. Web site: The full story of the Knesset building . Knesset homepage . 1 December 2021 .
  6. http://www.nrg.co.il/online/55/ART1/730/333.html#after_maavaron (Hebrew)
  7. Book: Wharton, Annabel Jane . Building the Cold War: Hilton International hotels and modern architecture . 116 . 2001 . . 0-226-89419-3. Link
  8. Web site: Israel Prize Official Site – Recipients in 1966 (in Hebrew).
  9. Book: Slyomovics, Susan . The object of memory: Arab and Jew narrate the Palestinian village . 38 . 1998 . . 978-0-8122-1525-0. Link
  10. Web site: Dora Gad . Sigal . Davidi . jwa.org . Jewish Women's Archive .