Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Artist of the Day, February 19, 2025: Chana Orloff, a Ukrainian-born French and Israeli sculptor / Art deco, figurative (#2222)

Chana Orloff (1888 – 1968) was a Ukrainian-born French and Israeli Art deco and figurative art sculptor.

Chana Orloff was born the eighth of nine children in a village called Kamenka, also known by the name of Tsaraconstantinovka, Ukraine. As a teenager she took classes in sewing and dressmaking in Mariupol to ensure she could earn a living and avoid an arranged marriage.

In order to escape the pogroms in this period in Ukraine, Orloff immigrated with her family to Ottoman Palestine in 1905 and settled in Petah Tikva (Gateway of Hope), the first Jewish agricultural settlement in Palestine. She worked as a seamstress designing and sewing European-style clothing for local Jewish settlers. Eventually she moved away from her family and rented a room of her own in the Neve Tzedek neighborhood of Jaffa, to be closer to her clients.

Orloff took class at the Gymnasia Herzliya, where Nishri was a teacher, and joined the Hapoel Hatzair workers movement and Hapoel Rishon LeZion sports club. After five years in Palestine, she was offered a teaching position in sewing and dressmaking at Hovevei Zion School for Girls in Jaffa. Orloff went to Paris to study fashion with the expectation she would return to Palestine to begin her teaching position. In Paris she took classes in drawing and fashion design and worked at the haute couture house of Paquin. In 1911 she matriculated at the École nationale supérieure des arts décoratifs in hopes of pursuing a career in fine art. She enrolled simultaneously in informal classes at the Académie Russe in Montparnasse. In 1916, she married Ary Justman, a Warsaw-born Jewish writer and poet. The couple had a son in 1918, but Justman died of influenza in the epidemic of 1919. When the Nazis invaded Paris, Orloff fled to Switzerland with her son and the Jewish painter Georges Kars. In February 1945, Kars committed suicide in Geneva, after which Orloff returned to Paris, to find that her house had been ransacked and the sculptures in her studio destroyed.

In Paris, Orloff became friendly with other young Jewish artists, among them Marc Chagall, Jacques Lipchitz, Amedeo Modigliani, Jules Pascin, Chaïm Soutine, and Ossip Zadkine. In 1913, she exhibited in the Salon d'Automne. After the establishment of the State of Israel, Orloff began spending an increasing amount of time there. The Tel Aviv Museum of Art held an exhibition of 37 of her sculptures in 1949. She remained in Israel for about a year in order to complete a sculpture of David Ben-Gurion, The Hero Monument to the defenders of Ein Gev and The Motherhood Monument in memory of Chana Tuchman Alderstein who died during the 1947–1949 Palestine war. After her return to Paris in 1950, Orloff received support and friendship from the Ukrainian-born artist Norman Carton to further grow her Parisian career using photography. She became a mentor to him. In addition to monuments, Orloff sculpted portraits of Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and future Prime Minister Levi Eshkol; the architects Pierre Chareau, and Auguste Perret; painters Henri Matisse, Amedeo Modigliani, Pablo Picasso, and Per Krohg; and the poets Hayyim Nahman Bialik, and Pierre Mac Orlan.

© 2025. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Chana Orloff  or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Ms. Chana Orloff
Maternity, circa 1914
Amazone, circa 1915

Dame enceinte, circa 1916
Le Baiser ou La Famille, circa 1916
Dame à l'éventail, circa 1921
Lucien Vogel, circa 1921
Le Peintre Widhopff, circa 1923
The Dancers (Sailor and Sweetheart) circa 1923
Femme accroupie, circa 1925
Jeune Américain, circa 1925
Le Peintre Reuven Rubin, circa 1926
Poisson, circa 1927
Chava Chabor, circa 1928
Portrait of Dr. Mira Oberholzer, circa 1936
 Portrait of Emil(e) Oberholzer, circa 1937
Tête de Madone, circa 1937
Caniche Assis, circa 1941
Paix, circa 1944
Le Retour, circa 1945
 Ben Gurion, circa 1949
Jeune Fille A La Natte [Young Girl With a Braid], circa 1951
Mother and child, circa 1951
Glaneuse, circa 1955
 Femme assise, circa 1957
 Femme assise (Mme Krohg), circa 1958
 Veuve Nº. 2, ref 411, circa 1960
 Acrobats, circa 1965
 Danseur, circa 1965
 Seated Dancer, circa 1967
Deborah, poétesse

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

Artist of the Day, February 18, 2025: Armando Testa, an Italian graphic designer, cartoonist, animator and painter (#2221)

Armando Testa (1917 – 1992) was an Italian graphic designer, cartoonist, animator and painter.

Born in Turin, Testa worked as a typesetter until 20 years old. He was initiated to artistic career by abstract painter Ezio D'Errico, who was one of his professors at the Vigliardi-Paravia Printing School he attended.

After winning a poster design contest in 1937, he started working in the advertising industry, and in 1946 abandoned his work as a printer and opened a graphic studio in his hometown. In 1956, he founded Studio Armando Testa along with his wife, Lidia, and associate Franco de Barberis, and their studio soon became one of Italy's largest agencies, partnering with Benton & Bowles in the United States and establishing several branches throughout Europe. A key role in Testa's success had television commercials, particularly the ones created for Carosello.

In 1959 he created the official logo for 1960 Summer Olympics. Studio Armando Testa's customers include Nestlé, Lavazza and Barilla.

Between 1965 and 1971, he was a professor of Design and Typographic Composition at the Polytechnic University of Turin.

He was granted the Gold Medal of the Ministry of Education for his contribution to Visual Art in 1968.

Starting from the mid-1980s, Testa focused on painting and poster design for cultural and social campaigns. In 1985 he was appointed honor laureate in Fort Collins, Colorado.

At the 66th edition of the Venice Film Festival, in September 2009, it was presented out of competition a biographical documentary film, Armando Testa - povero ma moderno directed by Pappi Corsicato.

© 2025. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Armando Testa or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

Armando Testa
Torino 2006 Olympic posters, 2006
Lot of two offsets- Nocero Umbro, circa 1991
Espremiamoci di più, circa 1991
Nuvola da cocktail, circa 1990
Sogliola Siberiana, circa 1987
Cavallo che ride cinese, circa 1982
Lot of three multiples- Tavolo con scarpine, Vedova Allegra a Timbuctu,
Creatura africana, circa 1980-87
Senza titolo, circa 1980
Notte italiana, circa 1980
Lot of three multiples- La poltrona, Saluti da Capri, Gita domenicale, circa 1978-88
Sorrisi e canzoni TV / Colora gli avvenimenti, circa 1977
Digestivo Antonetto via lo stomaco pesante (femme), circa 1975
Manifesto Offset [Telato], circa 1974
Euchessina, circa 1974
Paolo il Caldo, Regia di Marco Vicario, circa 1973
Albert Einstein / Comitato per le celebrazioni del centenario della nascita, circa 1970
Games of the XVII Olympiad Roma MCMLX, circa 1960
Cervinia, circa 1960
Arte Nuova Torino., circa 1959
Baratti & Milano Caramelle, circa 1958
 Punt e Mes - Giuseppe Verdi, circa 1956
Manifesto Offset, circa 1956
Carpano / Vermuth Re, circa 1956
Olio Sasso, circa 1955
Carpano il vermuth di Cavour, circa 1955
Asti Spumante Riccadonna, Canelli, circa 1948
Senza titolo
Rapanello
Pirelli Atlante
Facis Bernina Cappotto
Cane strabico
Baco da corda