GEORGE CHEMECHE (1934 - )     
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George Chemeche was born in 1934 and studied at the Avni Art School in Jel Aviv and the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. The style with which he is intimately associated, pattern painting, is non-minimalist, sensuous, romantic, rational and decorative. Its methods, thematic material and referents range across cultural and class lines. The style is two-dimensional, non-hierarchical, allover and acentric. Because most viewers respond with delight to patterning, it runs counter to the modernist taboo against a decorative quality in art. Though pattern painting's roots are in modern art, it contradicts some of its basic tenets as it attempts to assimilate aspects of Western and non-Western culture not previously accepted into the realm of high art.

Though most people intuitively recognize patterning, it is difficult to define. The most serviceable definition is that pattern is the systematic repetition of a motif or motifs used to cover a surface uniformly. The spaces between motifs are either other motifs or are an integral part of the repeat. Whatever f9rm the painting takes, its flat and pictorial space is at a minimum.

What makes patterning in pattern painting different from patterning in the "functional" arts-weaving, mosaics and so on, and especially in the art of non-Western cultures-is partly the use of pigment on canvas, but also, and of greater importance, intention and context. The intention is to make a high-art statement within a contemporary context by referring to, and using what to many still remains within the world of non-art.

Pattern painting, unlike abstractionism, has structure. It also has content as it refers to patterns in the real world. Usually, patterning intentionally acknowledges the decorative function of art, reconciling both the decorative and the meaningful.

    INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITIONS
  • 1978
    • Goldman Art Gallery, Haifa, Israel
  • 1977
    • Louis K. Meisel Gallery, New York
    • Alexandra Monett Gallery, Brussels
  • 1977
    • Givon Art GaJIery, Tel Aviv
  • 1974
    • South Houston Gallery, New York
    • Ray Landis Gallery, East Brunswick, New Jersey
  • 1973
    • Gala Gallery, Key Biscayne, Florida
    • Art Asia Gallery, Cambridge, Mass.
    • Bertha Urdang Gallery, New York
  • 1972
    • Selected Artists Gallery, New York
    • Mabat Art Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1971
    • Goldman Art Gallery, Haifa, Israel
  • 1970
    • Modern Art Gallery, Old Jaffa
  • 1969
    • Dugith Art Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1968
    • Dugith Art Gallery, Te Aviv
  • 1967
    • Hadassa "K" Klachkin Art Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1966
    • Rina Art Gallery, Jerusalem The Museum of Modern Art, Haifa
  • 1965
    • Chemerinsky Art Gallery, Tel Aviv
  • 1963
    • Galerie Transposition, Paris Collective Exhibitions
  • 1978
    • Gordon Gallery, Tel Aviv, "Six Artists"
    • Biv Gallery, New York, "Chelsea Artists"
    • Makler Gallery, Philadelphia, Pa.
  • 1978
    • "FJ.A.C.," Petit Palais Paris Galerie Naire, Paris
  • 1977
    • Weintraub Gallery, New York, Print Show
  • 1971
    • OHana Gallery, London
    • "Six Artists", Modern Art Gallery, Old Jaffa
  • 1969
    • The Autumn Exhibition, Tel Aviv Museum
  • 1965
    • "Young Artists", TeJ Aviv Museum
  • 1963
    • Salon de La Jeune Peinture, Musee d'art Moderne, Paris
    PERMANENT COLLECTIONS
  • Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art
  • Cornell Univerity, Ithaca, New York
  • Eversan Museum, Syracuse, N.Y.
  • Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum




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