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Ilan Baruch
Israeli plein air landscape painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Ilan Baruch (Hebrew: אילן ברוך; born 1974) is an Israeli plein air landscape painter.

His "cactus" series, painted over a period of three years, began as "fastidiously rendered... sun-drenched, [and] naturalistic," progressing to images that are "expressive [and] closely cropped."[1]
Invited to create a pair of new "Delft" tiles for the 2014 exhibition Blue-and-White Delftware, Baruch painted one with an olive tree and another with an image of the Dome of the Rock.[2]
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Solo exhibitions
- 1992, Nidbach (Layer), Jerusalem[3]
- 2004, The Cactus: Introspections, Helena Rubinstein Pavilion for Contemporary Art, Tel Aviv Museum of Art[3][1]
- 2005, MonartMuseum[4]
- 2013, "It was never truly a wilderness", at the Ramat Gan Museum of Israeli Art
Group exhibitions
- 1999, Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design[4]
- 2000, Yanko Dada Museum in EinHod, "Introspection Time"[4]
- 2000, "Observation Time"[5]
- 2007, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, New Acquisitions[4]
- 2014, Blue-and-White Delftware, Tel Aviv Museum of Art[2]
References
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