Joseph Zaritsky was the first artist to be awarded the prize 2 January 1968. The panel of judges for the prize included Sandberg and Yonah Fisher. The prize was given to Zaritsky for the 1964 painting which paid homage to Jan Vermeer. In the many interviews that followed the prize, Zaritsky stressed that the artwork has an independence of its own and "it is not permissible to look at a painting and see more than what is there", he explained "an artists should not imagine beyond what he sees. What he sees is what there is. A painting is not a dream"."Yosef Zaritsky and the Sandberg Prize", Davar, 1968/01/19Yosef Zaritsky receives the Sandberg Prize", Maariv, 1968/01/12
On December 3, 1968, the Sandberg Prize was awarded to Yigal Tumarkin for Sculpture and Arie Aroch for Painting."The Sandberg Prize for Yigal Tumarkin and Arie Aroch", Davar, 1968/11/13
In addition to the prize a Sandberg Research Grant was awarded over the years from the Department of Design and Architecture at the Israel Museum.Dana Nilerman, Prize recipients for the Israeli museum, Haaretz
For a complete listing see here
|
|