Arieh Navon (né Kligman) (; May 22, 1909 – November 29, 1996) was a Russian-Israeli painter and illustrator, the first cartoonist in the Yishuv. He was also a set designer, comic artist and book illustrator. Winner of the Israel Prize for Performing Arts in 1996.
Biography
Early life and education
Navon was born as Arieh Kligman in 1909 in the town of
Dunaivtsi (now modern-day
Ukraine), the son of Malka, daughter of Rabbi Yitzhak Meir of Ostburg, and Moshe HaCohen son of Yitzhak Kligman. He immigrated to Israel with his family in 1919 (age 10) on the ship "Ruslan". Studied art in
Yitzhak Frenkel's studio in
Tel Aviv in the late 1920s.
Career and art
He has hundreds of paintings, mostly drawings in ink or charcoal, and dozens of portraits of public figures, writers, actors and artists. A selection of them appears in his book "Records". A film based on his drawings called "The Way of a Singer in the Desert" was created in 1956, in collaboration between him and
Yaacov Agam and
Aryeh Mambush. He taught drawing at the Avni Institute and the Oranim Kibbutz Seminary. Navon participated in many exhibitions in Israel and around the world. A solo exhibition was held for him at the Israel Museum in 1978.
Eli Eshed suggests that a cartoon by Navon published in Davar on May 7, 1948, showing an old couple of Palmachniks telling tales to their grandson, was an inspiration to the famous song Hayu Zmanim.[Eli Eshed, 'היו זמנים' – שירו של חיים חפר בגרסה המקורית, בתרגום לרוסית ובפרודיה, Yekum magazine, August 24, 2018]
He died in Tel Aviv in 1996, at the age of 87, and is buried in the Yarkon Cemetery.
National Library of Israel, Arieh Navon collection
Awards and recognition
In 1975, he was selected by the International Theatre Institute as one of the 13 outstanding and innovative theater artists for the years 1970-75 (alongside director Peter Brook and others).
Family
Museum
See also