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Dov Feigin Edit Profile

sculptor

Dov Feigin was an Israeli sculptor.

Background

Dov Feigin was born in 1907 in Luhansk, Ukraine, then part of the Russian Empire. His father was a tailor.

Education

Feigin attended public Ukraine school as well as a Talmud Torah school.

Career

In 1924, he was arrested and imprisoned for three years. In 1933, Feigin was accepted to the École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs in Paris, France, where he studied as a traditional sculptor. In 1937, Feigin returned to Tel Aviv.

In 1948, he joined an artistic group called “Ofakim Hadasim” (Hebrew for - “New Horizons”) founded earlier that year by Yosef Zarizky.

The group was heavily inspired by the European Modern Art Movement. In 1956, influenced by this group, Feigins work transformed to be more abstract.

He began to use metal (iron) in constructing his sculptures. Works like 1956’s "Bird" and “Alomot” (he: אלומות - "stalk of wheat") or 1957’s “Ladderes” present a liniar abstract structure.

In 1948 and 1962, he attended the Venice Biennale.

In 1966, he designed a relief inside Yad Kennedy, a memorial to John F. Kennedy in Jerusalem. One of his most famous sculptures, Animal, (1958, restored in 2006) is now in the Lola Beer Ebner Sculpture Garden of the Tel Aviv Museum of Art in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Achievements

  • In 1946, Feigin was a co-recipient of the Dizengoff Prize for Sculpture. Sandberg Prize recipient.

Politics

In 1920, Feigin"s family moved to Gomel, where he became a member of the Socialist-Zionist movement Hashomer Hatzair.

Membership

In 1927, after his release, he emigrated to the Mandate Palestine and was one of the founding members of the Afikim Kibbutz.