SHMUEL PEER

GALLERY

Shmuel (Sam) Peer


1947 Born in Israel
1966 - 8"Technion", Haifa, Israel. Studies of Practical Engineering.
1973-6"Ontario College of Art", Toronto, Canada. A.O.C.A. Sculpture.
1978Teachers' College, Ramat Hasharon, Israel. Diploma
1979Moves to the Galil.
1993Assistant to sculptor, Yehiel Shemi.
2001Teaches in the workshop of WIZO College in Haifa.
2006Teaches sculpture technics in Tel Hai College.

One-Person Exhibitions, Outdoor Projects :

2021Gallery Siman Sheela in kibutz Amir , curators: Eti Nusbaum and Naftali Nachmani
2019The Barrer Art Center in Maalot , curator Noga Migdal
2019Artist House Tel Aviv, curator: Anat Gatenio. Catalogue.
2017"40 years to the Cabri Gallery". Curator: Drora Dekel
2012    Artists House, Tel-Aviv. Curator: Drora Dekel
2011"The Giving Tree", outdoor sculpture in Misgav-Am
2009The House of Yigal Alon in Genosar. Curator: Nava Harel Shoshani
2000Artist House, Jerusalem.
1998The Gallery for Israeli Art in Cabri. Curator: Drora Dekel
1989Instalation in the "Open Museum" in Tefen.
1988Gallery "Bograshov", Tel-Aviv. Curator: Udi Aloni
1976"Gallery 76" Toronto
1975"Gallery 76" Toronto

Group Exhibitions:

2015    "Connected Vessels" The Barrer Art Center in Maalot. Curator: Noga Migdal
2014"Macabri", "Hanina" gallery, Tel-Aviv. Curator: Liav Mizrahi. Catalogue.
"Earth" The Barrer Art Center in Maalot. Curator: Noga Migdal
2012"Hot Summer" The Cooperative Gallery in Cabri. Catalogue
"Tree Tractate" Ygal Alon House in Genosar. Curator: Nava Harel Shoshani
"Trees Along the Road" , The Barrer Art Center in Maalot. Curator: Noga Migdal
"Is it all Honey?" The Pioneers' Museum in Yifat. Curator: Michal Shachnai. Catalogue
2011 "Devolving Form" " Office in Tel Aviv" gallery. Tel Aviv Curator: Hana Kofler. Catalogue
2009"Olive Harvest Time" "The Edge" gallery in Nahariya. Curator: Lee Rimon
1996
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2009

"The Holiday of Holidays" Annual art festival in Wadi. Nisnas in Haifa. Alternating curators. Catalogues
2008"Blocked Space" The Gallery of Israeli Art in Cabri. Curator: Drora Dekel
Sculpting in the Galil Park in Carmiel. Curator: Salo Shaul
2001Cast iron sculpture conference in Salgotarjan, Hungary
1998"Milestones" Israeli sculpture 1948-1998, in Tefen, Israel. Curators: Amos Kenan and Hana Kofler.
1994"Art Focus" Israeli sculpture in "The Open Museum" in Tefen. Curator: Annie Goldenberg
1991Sculpture conference in Rishon Le Zion. Curator: David Katz
1989Gallery "Maimad", Tel Aviv. Curator: Reviva Regev
1987"Tel Hai 87", Sculpture conference, Tel Hai, Israel
1978"Aspects of Sculpture" Sculpture conference, Toronto
1977"REHEARSAL" An all Canadian sculpture exhibition in Harbourfront Art Gallery, Toronto.
1975Ontario Club, Toronto

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T E X T S


Liav Mizrahi/ "Macabri"

Exhibition catalogue, Hanina gallery in Tel Aviv 2014

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Hana Kofler/ "Devolving Form"

Exhibition catalogue, The Office in Tel Aviv Gallery 2011

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Nava Harel Shoshani/ "In My Line"

Exhibition page, Ginosar 2009

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Drora Dekel/ Shmuel Pe'er

Exhibition page, Cabri 1998

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Hana Kofler/ "Holiday of Holidays"

Exhibition catalogue, Haifa 1997

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Liav Mizrahi/ Macabri

Shmuel Pe'er assisted Yehiel Shemi, the famous sculptor at kibbutz Cabri and one of the most influential on the Israeli sculpture scene, in the monumental abstract style. Pe'er assisted Mr. Shemi for 4 years, after having studied in Canada, specializing in work with iron.

Through 3 pieces in the exhibition an exceptional talent can be seen, a formal complexity and a melancholic touch in the way of treating the material.

On the floor of one of the gallery's rooms, is an image of a huge bat; a black steel plate divided and attached by hinges that can't move in any direction, fixed in the shape of death. Like a sheet of canvas which has just been torn.

Another of Pe'er's pieces is a steel plate on the wall, that a house shaped plate is welded on and hidden by a painted flower pattern which covers the whole surface. In my opinion, these two sculptures, belong, to the literalistic stream of sculpture as it is defined by Robert Morris. The image of a house is a subject that appears alternately in Pe'er's work.

In the exhibition there is a wonderful linear sculpture, drawn in space and attached to the wall. A composition which looks as if taken from the paintings of Ori Reisman, the Galilean abstract painter, one of the founders of kibbutz Cabri. Pe'er's is a 3 dimensional. This is a thin and quiet sculpture which continues elements of the 50's and 60's of the 20's century. One from a series, this sculpture contradicts the landscape–blocking plates of Shemi. The landscape with all its variations is the nucleus of Pe'er's lyrical work.

Liav Mizrahi, 2014

 

Hana Kofler/ Devolving Form

Shmuel Pe'er wishes to define space in a condensed and clean way. The house which he created is a drawing of iron in space, hung in the air and hovering between thin tree roots and a treetop clean of leaves. It is a minimalistic work, sort of a fragile emblem of a dream – may be materialized, may be vanished - which rouses a feeling of presence and of absence in space, fullness and emptiness, volume, form and emotion. The simplicity of the piece represents all that is in the idea of the house: warmth, aesthetics, cleanness and a strong longing. At the same time, it is missing the essentials for its existence: the earth as a base and the sky as a cover.

Hana Kofler, Devolving Form, Office in TelAviv Gallery 2011

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Nava Harel Shoshani/ "In My Line"

Shmuel Peer draws with iron. Minimalistic sketches, full of expression, often have more than the eye can see. One needs to explore with much attention and discover the hidden anecdote between the sensitive lines, discover the object which prefers to show itself only on a second or third look.

The contour lines are soft, round, despite being made mostly out of iron, a stiff, hard material. This conflict is part of the unique language of Peer, as well as the illusion and secrecy.

Some of the works hold a transition from three-dimensional to two-dimensional and back, by looking at them from a certain angle. The shapes change with the shift in the point of view. Shmuel attempts to define space in a clean, concise manner. He tells a story that always connects to the functionality of space. He deals with shape and volume, position, empty and full. Along all these, the emotion is always present as well.

One of the main images in his creations is the Home, that appears in different versions. Starting with an outdoor statue, open-line house that engaged in a dialogue with the environment in TEL HAI 87, and ending with the small works in which it is concealed among the softened iron lines. The home as an object of longing, a place of matter and spirit, an island of peace and warmth. All these invite the viewer to a poetic exhibition that also embodies riddling and illusion.

Nava Harel Shoshani - Exhibition curator 2009

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Drora Dekel / Shmuel Pe'er

Sculpted in iron, authentic, intimate sculpture that seeks the quiet. Drawing with iron, lines in space, and putting patches of colour onto cut-out surfaces.

Peer examines the house, the exterior and the interior. He covers the surfaces with a pattern, like tapestry, with flowers, beans, or painting of pearls. '"the flowers caress", they appear on the surface, softening the iron. Peer's language is minimalistic. Tension is created in his works in relation to the minimalism of the 70's, because of its personal-narrative aspect and not formalistic. It has no interest in protest, reproduction, consumerism, taking an image out of its context, and in spite the fact that his works are aware of Pop Art, his interest is in flattening and décor.

The flattening in his works is reminiscent of the Islamic art's relation to mass. That reduces the mass by flattening the object with ornamental pattern.. The Vermeerian baroque with its restrained qualities, which is clean of dramatic sentimentalism, also influenced his works.

Peer is seeking restraint,simplicity, an almost objective balance and cleanliness that speaks of moments in life. " I've always been looking for a certain peacefullness like the Vermeer's paintings have. The look of his works is "Japanese"- aesthetic and precise.

Shmuel Peer creates a sculptural text, poetic and concentrated like a Japanese "Haiku" poem.

Drora Dekel, 1998

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The Holiday of Holidays

Shmuel Pe'er has erected his sculpture "Venus Descends to the Wadi" at the bottom of the Dor Steps which lead from the Haifa Museum into Wadi Nisnas. The sculpture is made as a drawing in space, and looks as though it might be the skeleton of a leaf, or a female figure. The dark drawing in space blends with the street of steps and relates ecologically to the human condition in the universe. The lines in this work define plane and spaces, by means of which Shmuel Pe'er turns the air bounded inside the framework of the "drawing" into sculpted material.

Hana Kofler, The Holiday of Holidays , Haifa 1997

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