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Dora Holzhandler
Born in Paris to
Polish Jewish refugee parents, Holzhandler has lived mostly in London
since the age of six. In 1948 she enrolled at the Anglo-French Art Centre,
London, where she met her future husband, George Swinford. They have three
daughters.
Family and ritual life, as embodied in memory are
central to her production. She does not draw or paint directly from life
or make preliminary studies, but rather finds her subjects in her rich
visual imagination. She describes the artistic process as 'a divine world
of play' through which a pristine, though familiar world is created. Her
subjects are lovers, children and families, often based in childhood
memory, but here always evoked as a kind of timeless present. Characters
realised in bold, simple forms occupy jewel-like interiors, in which
checkerboard patterns nestle against stripes; the whole being a
miraculous, instinctual orchestration of spangled colour. There are also
pulsating, animate landscapes, while cities, in her hands, become benign,
breathing organisms. Holzhandler discovered Buddhism in the early 1950's,
but is also student of the Jewish Kabbalah. These twin mystical interests
have served to confirm her open and celebratory view of existence, even
where events bring tragedy and sadness. As Philip Vann has said, 'Dora
recreates - or remembers - the world in all its poetic immanence, its
quintessence, its unposed suchness.
Dora Holzhandler is
represented in many museum collections including: The Museum of Modern
Art, Glasgow; Museum of Modern Art, Haifa; The Jewish Museum,
London.
Examples of her work: (examples only, and not paintings
exhibited in Joseph's Bookstore)



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