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Sonja Eisenberg (born 1926 in Berlin) is an American abstract painter. She fled Nazi Germany with her family and came to New York where she lives and works to this day. Eisenberg is an accomplished abstract painter, best known for her abstract expressionist watercolor and oil paintings. Her work is heavily inspired by her son, Ronald whom at a young age was diagnosed with Leukemia; he made her promise to “Share with others what you have always taught me… that there may be no more war.” Eisenberg’s works exhibit a progression from dark to light— an emotional quality of her work that seems to correspond to her optimistic look at life. She focuses on the sensual nature of art, aiming to illustrate her life and feelings through a combination of harmonious colors and smooth textures. Trained in music and dance at the Juilliard School of Performing Arts, Eisenberg is in tune with her own method of abstraction, translating her personal experience into her works— among them, watercolors, pastels, oils and collages. In the words of author and lecturer Olivier Bernier of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, “That her technique is dazzling goes without saying: these transparent mists, these vaporous distances, these infinitely subtle shades which appear in her work seem as if nature itself had made them; but then great art always seem inevitable. We are offered a series of voluptuous pleasures as we look at the wealth of details; and that is as it should be. Other artists might think that, alone, as a sufficient achievement. Eisenberg knows better: even as her work seduces the eye, it speaks to the soul; and that is why it will remain after so much else is forgotten.”〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.sonjaeisenberg.net/SonjaEisenbergSelectedCriticalAssessments.pdf )〕 Eisenberg is represented in the collection of the (Leonard Tourne Gallery ). She lives and works in New York City. ==Life== Sonja Eisenberg was born in Berlin, Germany in 1926. She arrived to the United States in 1938 after she and her family was forced into last-minute escape from the Nazis hordes. Having little money to survive, her father went out looking for a job while her family sold buttons and bobby pins to local stores. Before the Nazis came to power, her father manufactured butter and owned 100 dairy stores in Berlin. Her father’s success in Europe landed him a job offer of $100 a week selling Polish ham in the United States. Eisenberg’s own life, though, has been about persevering and getting through even more than the Holocaust. Eisenberg has suffered from Guillain-Barré syndrome, a nervous system disorder that has caused her excruciating pain for much of her life. In fact, all of the paintings in her 1970 First One Woman Show at the Bodley Gallery in New York were painted in bed. In 1959, her first of four children, Ronald, was stricken with leukemia and died at the age of 12. Shortly after Ronald’s death, his younger brother Ralph bought Eisenberg a watercolor set and asked her for a painting for his 10th birthday. Several years later, Eisenberg started making watercolors and using oils, pastels and other media. When she couldn’t paint with large strokes, she made collages out of tiny pieces of paper. Eisenberg’s husband decided it might help her overcome her grief if they moved from their dark apartment on 86th street to an apartment with a little bit more light. They bought into a new building on the corner of Park Avenue and 85th Street. She and her beau, to whom her carpenter introduced her after her husband died, brought out countless notebooks and portfolios of her works, many of which are on her website. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sonja Eisenberg」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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