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Nathan Rapoport
Polish-born Israeli-American sculptor and painter From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Nathan Rapoport (Hebrew: נתן רפופורט; 1911–1987) was a Warsaw-born Jewish sculptor and painter, later a resident of Israel and then the United States.
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Biography
Natan Yaakov Rapoport was born in Warsaw, Poland.[1] In 1936, he won a scholarship to study in France and Italy. He fled to the Soviet Union when the Nazi Germans invaded Poland. The Soviets initially provided him with a studio but then forced him to work as a manual laborer. When the war ended, he returned to Poland to study at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw and immigrated to Israel.[2] In 1959, he moved to the United States. He lived in New York City until his death in 1987.
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Monumental art
His sculptures in public places, with the year they were installed in, include:
- Monument to the Ghetto Heroes (1948), bronze, Warsaw, Poland
- Memorial to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1976), bronze, at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem;[3] a slightly modified replica of the Warsaw monument[4]
- Monument to Mordechai Anielewicz (1951), at Kibbutz Yad Mordechai, Israel[3]
- Monument to Six Million Jewish Martrys (1964), at the Horwitz-Wasserman Holocaust Memorial Plaza on Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Philadelphia, PA.
- Scroll of Fire (1971) in the Forest of the Martyrs near Jerusalem
- Liberation (Holocaust memorial) (1985), bronze, Liberty State Park, Jersey City, New Jersey
- Korczak's Last Walk at the Park Avenue Synagogue, New York, NY.
- Ghetto Square Monument at Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, Israel. https://www.yadvashem.org/articles/general/warsaw-memorial-personal-interpretation.html
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Gallery
- Monument to the Ghetto Heroes (1948) in Warsaw, west side
- Warsaw monument, east side
- Menorah from the Warsaw monument
- The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (1976), bronze, Yad Vashem, Jerusalem, Israel
- The Last March (1976), bronze, part of the Yad Vashem memorial to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising
- Monument to Mordechai Anielewicz (1951) at Yad Mordechai, Israel
- Kibbutz Negba, memorial to the participants in the 1948 battles
References
Further reading
External links
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