Sorel Etrog

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Doors open from the inside only, installation view, Edel Assanti, London, UK, 2017.
Biography
 
Although primarily known as a sculptor, Sorel Etrog’s (1933-2014) interdisciplinary practice encompassed painting, poetry, dance choreography, film and theatre. The stature of his frequent collaborators across these media – Claude Aveline, Samuel Beckett, John Cage, Eugène Ionesco, Marshall McLuhan – is testament to his significance within this generation. Etrog’s formal territory is vast and varied, yet two visual motifs remained consistent through much of his oeuvre: links and hinges. These devices were frequently deployed in his “abstracted figurative” sculptures, paintings and drawings as a means of transforming the human body or landscape into a web of industrial forms appropriated from common hardware stores. The works’ joints, muscles and limbs – rendered as mechanical, functional apparatus – oscillate between a poetic expression of humanity’s interconnectivity and an anxiety about our place within an automated society.
 
Sorel Etrog was born in 1933 in Jassy, Romania, where he studied painting between 1949-50. Etrog survived the Second World War, and emigrated to Israel with his family in 1950, studying at the Institute of Painting and Sculpture in Tel Aviv between 1953- 55. During this period he joined an artist collective at Ein Hod, founded by Dadaist Marcel Janco. In 1958 Etrog was granted a scholarship to the Brooklyn Museum Art Institute. Etrog moved to Toronto in 1963, where he settled for the rest of his life, representing Canada at 1966 Venice Biennale. Etrog had more than 85 solo exhibitions in North America, Europe and Asia in his lifetime, and his work can be found in public collections across the world including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, USA; Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel; Kunstmuseum Basel, Basel, Switzerland; Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA; National Gallery of Canada, Ontario, Canada; Seoul Museum of Modern Art, Seoul, South Korea; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, USA; and Tate Gallery, London, UK. His vast career was the subject of a major retrospective, 5 Decades, at the Art Gallery of Ontario in 2013, the year before his death at the age of eighty.

 

 

 

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Bibliography
Works
  • Sorel Etrog, Powersoul, 1988
    Powersoul, 1988
  • Sorel Etrog, Sun Life Study, 1984
    Sun Life Study, 1984
  • Sorel Etrog, Minox Study, 1978
    Minox Study, 1978
  • Sorel Etrog, Voyager Study, 1976
    Voyager Study, 1976
  • Sorel Etrog, Pieton, 1976
    Pieton, 1976
  • Sorel Etrog, Hingo Study, 1976
    Hingo Study, 1976
  • Sorel Etrog, Rushman II Study, 1976
    Rushman II Study, 1976
  • Sorel Etrog, Untitled, 1974-75
    Untitled, 1974-75
  • Sorel Etrog, Homage to Tristan Tzara, 1974-75
    Homage to Tristan Tzara, 1974-75
  • Sorel Etrog, Untitled, 1974-75
    Untitled, 1974-75
  • Sorel Etrog, The Paragrapher, 1974-75
    The Paragrapher, 1974-75
  • Sorel Etrog, Macrowaves, 1974-1975
    Macrowaves, 1974-1975
  • Sorel Etrog, Spiral, 1974
    Spiral, 1974
  • Sorel Etrog, Untitled, 1970
    Untitled, 1970
  • Sorel Etrog, Imagination Dead Imagine, 1969-1977
    Imagination Dead Imagine, 1969-1977
  • Sorel Etrog, Samuel Beckett, 1969
    Samuel Beckett, 1969
  • Sorel Etrog, Targets, 1969
    Targets, 1969
  • Sorel Etrog, Portrait of Eugène Ionesco, 1968
    Portrait of Eugène Ionesco, 1968
  • Sorel Etrog, Palazzo Strozzi, Installation view, 1968
    Palazzo Strozzi, Installation view, 1968
  • Sorel Etrog, Venice Biennale, Canadian Pavilion, 1966
    Venice Biennale, Canadian Pavilion, 1966
  • Sorel Etrog, Moses, 1965
    Moses, 1965
  • Sorel Etrog, Flight, 1963-64
    Flight, 1963-64
Media

In conjunction with the exhibition 'Doors open from the inside only', curators Melissa Hamnett (V&A), Daniel Herrmann (Whitechapel Gallery) and Dr Jon Wood (Henry Moore Institute) will discuss the works of the celebrated artist Sorel Etrog (1933-2014).

Sorel Etrog describes Toronto in the 1960s and one of the most prolific periods of his long career.
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