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  1. Hananiah Harari traveled to Palestine in 1934 with the sculptor Herzl Emanuel, where they worked on a kibbutz and visited Jerusalem and the Sea of Galilee. Two years later Harari was a founding member of the American Abstract Artists, a group established in New York to promote nonobjective art.

    • 8th and G Streets, NW, Washington, 20004, DC
    • July 19, 2000
    • August 29, 1912
  2. www.cwamericanmodernism.com › post › hananiah-harariHananiah Harari (1912 – 2000)

    Sep 6, 2023 · Deeply influenced by Stuart Davis, Harari’s New York streetscapes began with clearly recognizable objects and landmarks as in Into New York (1937 - Collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art), New York Harbor (1937), Up and Downtown (1938), and his other mural proposals for the Nurses Home on Welfare Island (1937) and the Williamsburg ...

  3. In 1943, he exhibited at the landmark “American Realists and Magic Realists” at the Museum of Modern Art in New York and at the important traveling exhibition, “Abstract and Surrealist Art in the United States” organized by the San Francisco Art Museum.

  4. His work can be found in many public collections, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; and Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY.

  5. A native of Rochester, NewYork, Harari began to paint while still a teenager. He studied first at the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, and from 1930 to 1932 at the School of Fine Arts at Syracuse University. In Paris in 1932, he studied with Fernand Léger, André Lhote, and Marcel Grommaire.

  6. Hananiah Haraari, the celebrated American painter and illustrator, was born on August 29, 1912 in Rochester, NY. Harari studied first at the Rochester Memorial Art Gallery, and then from 1930-32 at Syracuse University School of Fine Arts.

  7. His first New York exhibition was in 1939, at Mercury Gallery. He worked in both a semi-abstract style, and a precise realist style; inspired by the work of William Michael Harnett, he painted many trompe-l'œil still lifes.

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