30 dagen niet goed, geld terug · garantie Gratis wereldwijde verzending
448.429kunstwerken 30.637kunstenaars 4.753musea 32talen
Valuta
Taal
Atelier · Sinds 2015 · Parijs, Frankrijk
AllPaintingsStore
allpaintingsstore.com
Account Verlanglijstje Winkelwagen

VoorvertoningVoorvertoning AR-previewAR-preview Schakel over naar print Schakel over naar printSchakel over naar handgeschilderd kunstwerk Schakel over naar handgeschilderd kunstwerkWissel naar afbeelding Wissel naar afbeelding VerstuurVerstuur
Toevoegen aan favorieten Toevoegen aan favorieten DownloadDownload Vergelijkbare werkenVergelijkbare werken RöntgenonderzoekRöntgenonderzoek DiavoorstellingDiavoorstelling

Kitchen Cupboard

herzl jacob kashetsky (1950 –)

Herzl Kashetsky is a Canadian realist painter honoring Holocaust victims through poignant figurative art. His commemorative works explore memory & resilience.

Canada Council Art Bank (Ottawa, Canada)

Discover the Canada Council Art Bank in Ottawa! Explore over 17,000 contemporary Canadian artworks – rent art, view exhibitions & support artists. A national treasure showcasing diverse voices and cultural expression.

Herzl Kashetsky (b. 1950)Herzl Kashetsky is a New Brunswick painter initially associated with the magic realist school, a regional art movement centred in Atlantic Canada. These artists combined highly realist paintings of objects with an almost surrealist intensity of light, which is evident in Kashetsky’s meticulously executed 1992 series Beach Stones. In 1996, Kashetsky completed “A Prayer for the Dead,” a series of paintings depicting the Holocaust, for which he received the Canadian Red Cross Humanitarian Award. These paintings were noted for their haunting tone and detailed recreation of the faces of the dying, a mass grave and crematorium door, said to be the artists’ way of “paying respect to the dead, to the victims of the Holocaust” as well as those lost from his own life. Curator Tom Smart of Fredericton’s Beaverbrook Art Gallery said of these works,

Over dit kunstwerk

QR-code

QR-code