Hedwig Grossman Lehmann Explained

Hedwig Grossman Lehmann
Birth Date:1902
Birth Place:Berlin
Death Date:1995
Nationality:Israeli, Jewish
Known For:Pottery, sculpting, woodcarving and ceramicist
Movement:Israeli art

Hedwig Grossman Lehmann (1902–1995) was a German-born Israeli artist.

Biography

Hedwig Grossman was born in Germany in 1902. Her father was Polish and her mother, Hispanic. Hedwig's family grew up as assimilated and anti-Zionistic Jews. During her childhood, Hedwig joined a German youth movement "Vender Fogal". She left this group to later join the Zionistic Jewish youth movement "Blue and White".

Grossman showed an early talent for art and attended art classes in her school where they taught pottery. Grossman's success was written up in the local newspaper where she was noted as being the first woman in this field. Later Grossman moved to a small potter's village in Lower Silesia and further developed her pottery skills. After that she moved to Bolesławiec where she studied the Chemistry of Pottery and experimented with clay from Israel, as she was interested in moving to Israel.Grossman moved to Berlin in 1930 and opened a pottery workshop. She participated in exhibitions and was accepted into the "Creative Women Union".[1]

In the years 1930–1933 she began working with Rudi Lehmann, whom she later married. In the autumn of 1932 she immigrated to the Land of Israel with her husband, settling in Haifa. Grossman was one of the first Israeli artists to use local clays and derived inspiration from Arab pottery. Grossman's ceramic works made use of local Israeli materials and natural colors and shows influences from archaeological artifacts. In the early 1950s, she began to produce woodcuts. In 1935, Grossman established a flower pot factory and ceramic workshop at Kibbutz Yagur. In 1937, the couple moved to Jerusalem. In 1953, she was one of the founders of the Artists' Colony Ein Hod, where she lived until 1957. In 1959, the couple moved to Givatayim, where they established a municipal art school.

Hedwig Grossman Lehmann died in 1995.[2]

Awards and recognition

Education

Teaching

Notes and References

  1. Gabriel Talipr, Gazit (Monthly publication for art and literature). Volume 27, 1971. (Hebrew)
  2. Web site: Information Center for Israeli Art The Israel Museum, Jerusalem. www.imj.org.il. 2016-11-16.