{"title":"阿维格多w.g. pos<e:1> q (1934-2016)","authors":"Ziva Amishai-Maisels","doi":"10.3828/aj.2017.13","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Avigdor Posèq had a long, multifaceted life. He was born Victor (Vitek) Pisek in 1934 to a well-to-do intellectual family in Cracow. In August 1939, the family fled the coming war to Zamość, where they barely survived the Nazi bombing. In June 1940, they traveled to L’viv (then Lvov, ruled by the Soviet Union), from where they were deported and sent on a 2-week journey to western Siberia in a sealed freight car. During the winter of 1940–1941, they suffered from constant cold and hunger. Despite the hardships, Vitek’s mother was able to find a professor among the deportees to teach the children. After a year in dire conditions, the Poles were allowed to leave Siberia, and in December 1941, at the end of a five-week journey in a crowded freight train, the family reached Uzbekistan. After months of living in one room in unhealthy conditions, they were sent to a refugee camp near Teheran, where Vitek was hospitalized for pneumonia with complications from which he almost died. After everyone in the family became ill, they were moved to Teheran, where they finally received proper medical care. In November 1942, they crossed through Iraq and Jordan to Palestine, arriving in December, and settled in Tel Aviv in 1943. There the boy slowly recovered his health and began to paint while attending a Polish-language school.1 Upon graduation, when he was 13 years old, his mother arranged art lessons for him at Tel Aviv’s Avni Institute with Joseph Schwartzmann, who had studied with Käthe Kollwitz in Berlin and who stressed the importance of a solid academic grounding in anatomy as well as in painting and drawing. Uncomfortable in the Herzliya Gymnasium because of his scant knowledge of Hebrew, Vitek enrolled in the Mikveh Yisrael Agricultural School while continuing to study painting. In 1949 (at the age of 15), he exhibited as Avigdor Pisak in the Young Artists Show in Tel Aviv, and in 1951 he was included in the Art in Israel exhibition at the Tel Aviv Museum. From 1952 to 1956, he studied at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, majoring in stage design so that he could support himself while he painted. Returning to Israel upon graduation, he worked in Tel Aviv for Habima","PeriodicalId":41476,"journal":{"name":"Ars Judaica-The Bar Ilan Journal of Jewish Art","volume":"13 1","pages":"155 - 158"},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2018-03-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Avigdor W. G. Posèq (1934–2016)\",\"authors\":\"Ziva Amishai-Maisels\",\"doi\":\"10.3828/aj.2017.13\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Avigdor Posèq had a long, multifaceted life. He was born Victor (Vitek) Pisek in 1934 to a well-to-do intellectual family in Cracow. In August 1939, the family fled the coming war to Zamość, where they barely survived the Nazi bombing. In June 1940, they traveled to L’viv (then Lvov, ruled by the Soviet Union), from where they were deported and sent on a 2-week journey to western Siberia in a sealed freight car. During the winter of 1940–1941, they suffered from constant cold and hunger. Despite the hardships, Vitek’s mother was able to find a professor among the deportees to teach the children. After a year in dire conditions, the Poles were allowed to leave Siberia, and in December 1941, at the end of a five-week journey in a crowded freight train, the family reached Uzbekistan. After months of living in one room in unhealthy conditions, they were sent to a refugee camp near Teheran, where Vitek was hospitalized for pneumonia with complications from which he almost died. After everyone in the family became ill, they were moved to Teheran, where they finally received proper medical care. In November 1942, they crossed through Iraq and Jordan to Palestine, arriving in December, and settled in Tel Aviv in 1943. There the boy slowly recovered his health and began to paint while attending a Polish-language school.1 Upon graduation, when he was 13 years old, his mother arranged art lessons for him at Tel Aviv’s Avni Institute with Joseph Schwartzmann, who had studied with Käthe Kollwitz in Berlin and who stressed the importance of a solid academic grounding in anatomy as well as in painting and drawing. Uncomfortable in the Herzliya Gymnasium because of his scant knowledge of Hebrew, Vitek enrolled in the Mikveh Yisrael Agricultural School while continuing to study painting. In 1949 (at the age of 15), he exhibited as Avigdor Pisak in the Young Artists Show in Tel Aviv, and in 1951 he was included in the Art in Israel exhibition at the Tel Aviv Museum. From 1952 to 1956, he studied at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, majoring in stage design so that he could support himself while he painted. 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Avigdor Posèq had a long, multifaceted life. He was born Victor (Vitek) Pisek in 1934 to a well-to-do intellectual family in Cracow. In August 1939, the family fled the coming war to Zamość, where they barely survived the Nazi bombing. In June 1940, they traveled to L’viv (then Lvov, ruled by the Soviet Union), from where they were deported and sent on a 2-week journey to western Siberia in a sealed freight car. During the winter of 1940–1941, they suffered from constant cold and hunger. Despite the hardships, Vitek’s mother was able to find a professor among the deportees to teach the children. After a year in dire conditions, the Poles were allowed to leave Siberia, and in December 1941, at the end of a five-week journey in a crowded freight train, the family reached Uzbekistan. After months of living in one room in unhealthy conditions, they were sent to a refugee camp near Teheran, where Vitek was hospitalized for pneumonia with complications from which he almost died. After everyone in the family became ill, they were moved to Teheran, where they finally received proper medical care. In November 1942, they crossed through Iraq and Jordan to Palestine, arriving in December, and settled in Tel Aviv in 1943. There the boy slowly recovered his health and began to paint while attending a Polish-language school.1 Upon graduation, when he was 13 years old, his mother arranged art lessons for him at Tel Aviv’s Avni Institute with Joseph Schwartzmann, who had studied with Käthe Kollwitz in Berlin and who stressed the importance of a solid academic grounding in anatomy as well as in painting and drawing. Uncomfortable in the Herzliya Gymnasium because of his scant knowledge of Hebrew, Vitek enrolled in the Mikveh Yisrael Agricultural School while continuing to study painting. In 1949 (at the age of 15), he exhibited as Avigdor Pisak in the Young Artists Show in Tel Aviv, and in 1951 he was included in the Art in Israel exhibition at the Tel Aviv Museum. From 1952 to 1956, he studied at the Brera Academy of Fine Arts in Milan, majoring in stage design so that he could support himself while he painted. Returning to Israel upon graduation, he worked in Tel Aviv for Habima