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⚫ | '''Maurice Ascalon (] - ])''' was born Moshe Klein in eastern ]. From an early age, he was determined to pursue his artistic yearnings, however in order to do so, he was forced to abandon his ultra-religious Chasidic Jewish roots – for artistic expression was frowned upon in the eastern Hungarian “Shtetl” in which he was raised. When he was 15 years old Maurice left his family and boyhood home to study art at the Academy des Beaux Arts in Brussels. He took with him an in-depth understanding of the rituals and traditions of the Jewish ceremonies, which knowledge he would later apply to his artistic endeavors. | ||
'''__Maurice Ascalon (1913 to 2003)__''' | |||
⚫ | Maurice Ascalon was born Moshe Klein in eastern Hungary |
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In 1934, after concluding his formal artistic training in Brussels and later Milan, Maurice immigrated to the land of Israel (then Palestine). There he met his wife-to-be, Ziporah Kartujinsky, a Polish-born Jew, granddaughter to the distinguished cartographer and scientist of the same surname. (Ziporah, who died in 1982, became a sculptor in her own right late in her life, creating magnificent bas reliefs depicting the Shtetl life of her childhood). | In 1934, after concluding his formal artistic training in Brussels and later Milan, Maurice immigrated to the land of Israel (then Palestine). There he met his wife-to-be, Ziporah Kartujinsky, a Polish-born Jew, granddaughter to the distinguished cartographer and scientist of the same surname. (Ziporah, who died in 1982, became a sculptor in her own right late in her life, creating magnificent bas reliefs depicting the Shtetl life of her childhood). | ||
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Maurice Ascalon’s commissions include permanent installations at worship and public spaces throughout the United States, Mexico, and Israel. His works have been exhibited at and are among the collections of institutions including the Jewish Museum in New York, the Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia, the Spertus Museum in Chicago, and the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. | Maurice Ascalon’s commissions include permanent installations at worship and public spaces throughout the United States, Mexico, and Israel. His works have been exhibited at and are among the collections of institutions including the Jewish Museum in New York, the Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia, the Spertus Museum in Chicago, and the University of Judaism in Los Angeles. | ||
==Bibliography== | |||
__SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY__ | |||
“Modern Creations from an Ancient Land” by Prof. Nurith Kenaan-Kedar, Eretz Israel Museum/Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel (2006). | “Modern Creations from an Ancient Land” by Prof. Nurith Kenaan-Kedar, Eretz Israel Museum/Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel (2006). |
Revision as of 21:48, 27 February 2006
Maurice Ascalon (1913 - 2003) was born Moshe Klein in eastern Hungary. From an early age, he was determined to pursue his artistic yearnings, however in order to do so, he was forced to abandon his ultra-religious Chasidic Jewish roots – for artistic expression was frowned upon in the eastern Hungarian “Shtetl” in which he was raised. When he was 15 years old Maurice left his family and boyhood home to study art at the Academy des Beaux Arts in Brussels. He took with him an in-depth understanding of the rituals and traditions of the Jewish ceremonies, which knowledge he would later apply to his artistic endeavors.
In 1934, after concluding his formal artistic training in Brussels and later Milan, Maurice immigrated to the land of Israel (then Palestine). There he met his wife-to-be, Ziporah Kartujinsky, a Polish-born Jew, granddaughter to the distinguished cartographer and scientist of the same surname. (Ziporah, who died in 1982, became a sculptor in her own right late in her life, creating magnificent bas reliefs depicting the Shtetl life of her childhood).
In 1939, Maurice Ascalon designed and created the enormous 14 foot tall hammered copper relief sculpture of three figures, "The Toiler of the Soil, the Laborer and the Scholar", which adorned the façade of the Jewish Palestine Pavilion of the 1939 New York World's Fair. Maurice was commissioned to create this work for the historically significant Pavilion which introduced the world to the concept of a modern Jewish state. (The work is now part of the collection of the Spertus Museum in Chicago.)
In the late 1930s, Maurice founded an Israeli decorative arts manufacturing company, Pal-Bell, which produced trademark bronze and brass menorahs and other Judaic and secular decorative art items that were exported in large numbers worldwide. Maurice’s well-recognized designs, some art deco, others more traditional, introduced the use of "green patina" (verdigris) to Israeli metalwork, which is now a hallmark of Israel's crafts industry. During Israel's War for Independence in 1948, Maurice designed munitions for the Israeli Army and, at the request of the Israeli government, retrofitted his factory to produce munitions for the war effort. In 1956 Maurice immigrated to the United States.
During the latter part of the 1950s through the 1960s, Maurice resided in New York and Los Angeles. He gained a reputation as a master silversmith, creating for synagogues magnificent Torah crowns and other ceremonial objects of Judaica that he first learned of in his youth. For a time, he taught sculpture on the fine arts faculty of the University of Judaism in Los Angeles.
In the late 1970s, Maurice’s workshop, now formally dubbed Ascalon Studios, relocated to the Philadelphia area. It became (and still is today, under the direction of Maurice’s son, David Ascalon) a multifaceted art studio dedicated to the design of and creation of site-specific art for worship and public spaces.
In February of 2003, Maurice Ascalon celebrated his 90th birthday as a resident of Cuernavaca, Mexico, where he lived with his eldest son, Adir Ascalon (Adir was a surrealist painter and sculptor who collaborated with the noted Mexican muralist Siqueros). In August of 2003, Maurice passed away after a long fruitful life. He succumbed to complications related to Parkinson's Disease, an illness he endured during most of the final decade of his life.
Maurice Ascalon’s commissions include permanent installations at worship and public spaces throughout the United States, Mexico, and Israel. His works have been exhibited at and are among the collections of institutions including the Jewish Museum in New York, the Museum of American Jewish History in Philadelphia, the Spertus Museum in Chicago, and the University of Judaism in Los Angeles.
Bibliography
“Modern Creations from an Ancient Land” by Prof. Nurith Kenaan-Kedar, Eretz Israel Museum/Tel Aviv University, Tel Aviv, Israel (2006).
“Five Centuries of Hanukkah Lamps from The Jewish Museum” by Susan L. Braunstein, The Jewish Museum (2005).
“New Jersey Artist Honored Posthumously in Tel Aviv” New Jersey Jewish News, December 15, 2005 at 50.
“Luminous Art: Hanukkah Menorahs of the Jewish Museum” by Susan L. Braunstein, The Jewish Museum, Yale University Press (2004).
“Famous Jews Who Died Last Year” Jewish Telegraphic Agency, January 2, 2004.
“In the Frame” by Gil Goldfine, The Jerusalem Post, August 15, 2003 at B14.
“Sculptor Maurice Ascalon Dies” by Barbara Rothschild, The Courier Post, August 7, 2003 at B1.
“M. Ascalon Maker of Judaic Art”, The Philadelphia Inquirer, August 5, 2003.