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Itzchak Tarkay
b. 1935
At the age
of 9, Tarkay and his family were sent to the Mathausen
Concentration Camp, until Allied liberation freed them a
year later. In 1949 his family immigrated to Israel,
living in a kibbutz for several years, and by 1951 he
had received a scholarship to the Bezalel Art Academy
where he studied under the artist Schwartzman. Until his
graduation from the Avni Institute of Art in 1956,
Tarkay learned a great deal from many famous artists of
the time, such as Mokady, Janko, Schtreichman and
Stematsky.
Tarkay has achieved recognition as a leading
representative of a new generation of figurative
artists. The inspiration for his work clearly lies with
French Impressionism, and Post-Impressionism,
particularly the color sophistication of Matisse and the
drawing style of Toulouse-Lautrec, while summing up the
characteristics of his model subject without relying on
the precise copying of natural forms, or the patient
assembling of exact detail. As well as being a painter
and watercolorist, Tarkay is a master graphic artist and
his rich tapestry of form and color is achieved
primarily through the use of the serigraph. In his
serigraphs, many colors are laid over one another and
used to create texture and transparency.
After exhibiting both in Israel and abroad, he received
recognition at the International Art Expo in New York in
1986 and 1987 for works in several forms of media,
including oil, acrylic and watercolor. Today, Tarkay is
considered one of the most influential artists of the
early 21st Century and has inspired dozens of artists
throughout the world, with his contemplative depiction
of the female figure. Three hardcover books have been
written on Tarkay and his art, the most recent, Tarkay,
Profile of an Artist was published in 1997.

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