翻訳と辞書
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・ Pavel Vladimirovich Yakovlev
・ Pavel Vojtisek
・ Pavel Volya
・ Pavel Vondruška
・ Pavel Vorobiev
・ Pavel Voroshnin
・ Pavel Vostřák
・ Pavel Voyloshnikov
・ Pavel Vrba
・ Pavel Vrublevsky
・ Pavel Vrána
・ Pavel Vtyurin
・ Pavel Vyhnal
・ Pavel Vítek
・ Pavel Vízner
Pavel Wolberg
・ Pavel Wonka
・ Pavel Yablochkov
・ Pavel Yakovlev
・ Pavel Yakovlev (footballer, born 1997)
・ Pavel Yakushevskiy
・ Pavel Yakushkin
・ Pavel Yawseenka
・ Pavel Yegorov
・ Pavel Yengalychev
・ Pavel Yesikov
・ Pavel Yevgenyevich Sokolov
・ Pavel Yevseyev
・ Pavel Yevteyev
・ Pavel Yumatov


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Pavel Wolberg : ウィキペディア英語版
Pavel Wolberg, (born 1966) is an Art photographer and a photojournalist, born in Leningrad Soviet-Union, lives and works in Tel-Aviv, Israel.==Biography==At the age of 7, in 1973, Pavel Wolberg moved to Israel from Leningrad (Saint Petersburg) with his mother and grandmother, and grew up in the southern town of Beersheba in the Negev desert. In 1994, Wolberg graguated photography studies in Camera Obscura School of Art in Tel-Aviv. His first solo exhibition has been shown in Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, 1995. Since then, his works has been exhibited in Museums and galleries worldwide, including solo shows in Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Jewish Museum, Berlin, The Jewish Museum (Manhattan) , and George Eastman House, New York.(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.artspace.com/pavel_wolberg )(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://eastmanhouse.org/events/detail.php?title=pavelwolberg_2014 ) Wolberg is long time represented by Dvir Art Gallery, and by Andrea Meislin gallery, New York. He participated in the 2007 Venice Biennale exhibition "Think With The Senses, Feel With the Mind", curated by Robert Storr (art academic).(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.archive.melikohanian.com/?p=84 ) Wolberg has been awarded by Leon Constantiner Prize for Israeli Photography, Tel Aviv Museum of Art (2005) and WPO- Sony World Photography Awards (2014). Since 1997, he's being working for newspapers and news agencies such as "Haaretz", "European Pressphoto Agency" (EPA) and The New York Times. His works has been published in Vogue (magazine), Stiletto, Der Spiegel etc. Since 2010, Wolberg is working as well on art projects in Ethiopia - Bodi tribe, Post-Soviet states, and in Japan.(【引用サイトリンク】title=Section redirect, news: Georgia )It is often said about Pavel Wolberg's capacity to view his adopted country both intimately and from a distance, and about his ability to capture the private moment in the complex reality of conflicts and political instability of the region. War, terror, occupation, army, intifada, Ultra orthodox Judaism and Hasidic Judaism communities, down town Tel Aviv, religious and secular, are usually captured in large and even panoramic formats.Lindsay Harris, wrote about Pavel Wolberg,in the catalogue of the 52 Venice Biennale: "In their poignant representation of potent, even unsettling imagery, Wolberg's photographs evoke the gritty drama of traditional photojournalism, such as the black-and-white wartime photographs of Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson and other members of Magnum Photos. Yet Wolberg's carefully composed images and refined treatment of light belie his artistic sensibility". "He is the witness I would have liked to have there instead of me," writes Haaretz photographer Alex Levac. Uzi Zur wrote in Haaretz, 2007, "In the future Pavel Wolberg‟s masterpieces will be our chronicles". Micha Bar-Am, an Israel Prize laureate in photography, thinks that Wolberg "succeeds in demonstrating that news photography can become iconic photography".Wolberg has a son, Amir, and a daughter, Nina.

Pavel Wolberg, (born 1966) is an Art photographer and a photojournalist, born in Leningrad Soviet-Union, lives and works in Tel-Aviv, Israel.
==Biography==

At the age of 7, in 1973, Pavel Wolberg moved to Israel from Leningrad (Saint Petersburg) with his mother and grandmother, and grew up in the southern town of Beersheba in the Negev desert. In 1994, Wolberg graguated photography studies in Camera Obscura School of Art in Tel-Aviv. His first solo exhibition has been shown in Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, 1995. Since then, his works has been exhibited in Museums and galleries worldwide, including solo shows in Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Jewish Museum, Berlin, The Jewish Museum (Manhattan) , and George Eastman House, New York.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.artspace.com/pavel_wolberg )〕〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://eastmanhouse.org/events/detail.php?title=pavelwolberg_2014 )〕 Wolberg is long time represented by Dvir Art Gallery, and by Andrea Meislin gallery, New York. He participated in the 2007 Venice Biennale exhibition "Think With The Senses, Feel With the Mind", curated by Robert Storr (art academic).〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.archive.melikohanian.com/?p=84 )〕 Wolberg has been awarded by Leon Constantiner Prize for Israeli Photography, Tel Aviv Museum of Art (2005) and WPO- Sony World Photography Awards (2014). Since 1997, he's being working for newspapers and news agencies such as "Haaretz", "European Pressphoto Agency" (EPA) and The New York Times. His works has been published in Vogue (magazine), Stiletto, Der Spiegel etc. Since 2010, Wolberg is working as well on art projects in Ethiopia - Bodi tribe, Post-Soviet states, and in Japan.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Section redirect, news: Georgia )
It is often said about Pavel Wolberg's capacity to view his adopted country both intimately and from a distance, and about his ability to capture the private moment in the complex reality of conflicts and political instability of the region. War, terror, occupation, army, intifada, Ultra orthodox Judaism and Hasidic Judaism communities, down town Tel Aviv, religious and secular, are usually captured in large and even panoramic formats.
Lindsay Harris, wrote about Pavel Wolberg,in the catalogue of the 52 Venice Biennale: "In their poignant representation of potent, even unsettling imagery, Wolberg's photographs evoke the gritty drama of traditional photojournalism, such as the black-and-white wartime photographs of Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson and other members of Magnum Photos. Yet Wolberg's carefully composed images and refined treatment of light belie his artistic sensibility". "He is the witness I would have liked to have there instead of me," writes Haaretz photographer Alex Levac. Uzi Zur wrote in Haaretz, 2007, "In the future Pavel Wolberg‟s masterpieces will be our chronicles". Micha Bar-Am, an Israel Prize laureate in photography, thinks that Wolberg "succeeds in demonstrating that news photography can become iconic photography".
Wolberg has a son, Amir, and a daughter, Nina.

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Pavel Wolberg, (born 1966) is an Art photographer and a photojournalist, born in Leningrad Soviet-Union, lives and works in Tel-Aviv, Israel.==Biography==At the age of 7, in 1973, Pavel Wolberg moved to Israel from Leningrad (Saint Petersburg) with his mother and grandmother, and grew up in the southern town of Beersheba in the Negev desert. In 1994, Wolberg graguated photography studies in Camera Obscura School of Art in Tel-Aviv. His first solo exhibition has been shown in Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, 1995. Since then, his works has been exhibited in Museums and galleries worldwide, including solo shows in Tel Aviv Museum of Art, The Jewish Museum, Berlin, The Jewish Museum (Manhattan) , and George Eastman House, New York.(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.artspace.com/pavel_wolberg )(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://eastmanhouse.org/events/detail.php?title=pavelwolberg_2014 ) Wolberg is long time represented by Dvir Art Gallery, and by Andrea Meislin gallery, New York. He participated in the 2007 Venice Biennale exhibition "Think With The Senses, Feel With the Mind", curated by Robert Storr (art academic).(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.archive.melikohanian.com/?p=84 ) Wolberg has been awarded by Leon Constantiner Prize for Israeli Photography, Tel Aviv Museum of Art (2005) and WPO- Sony World Photography Awards (2014). Since 1997, he's being working for newspapers and news agencies such as "Haaretz", "European Pressphoto Agency" (EPA) and The New York Times. His works has been published in Vogue (magazine), Stiletto, Der Spiegel etc. Since 2010, Wolberg is working as well on art projects in Ethiopia - Bodi tribe, Post-Soviet states, and in Japan.(【引用サイトリンク】title=Section redirect, news: Georgia )It is often said about Pavel Wolberg's capacity to view his adopted country both intimately and from a distance, and about his ability to capture the private moment in the complex reality of conflicts and political instability of the region. War, terror, occupation, army, intifada, Ultra orthodox Judaism and Hasidic Judaism communities, down town Tel Aviv, religious and secular, are usually captured in large and even panoramic formats.Lindsay Harris, wrote about Pavel Wolberg,in the catalogue of the 52 Venice Biennale: "In their poignant representation of potent, even unsettling imagery, Wolberg's photographs evoke the gritty drama of traditional photojournalism, such as the black-and-white wartime photographs of Robert Capa, Henri Cartier-Bresson and other members of Magnum Photos. Yet Wolberg's carefully composed images and refined treatment of light belie his artistic sensibility". "He is the witness I would have liked to have there instead of me," writes Haaretz photographer Alex Levac. Uzi Zur wrote in Haaretz, 2007, "In the future Pavel Wolberg‟s masterpieces will be our chronicles". Micha Bar-Am, an Israel Prize laureate in photography, thinks that Wolberg "succeeds in demonstrating that news photography can become iconic photography".Wolberg has a son, Amir, and a daughter, Nina.」の詳細全文を読む



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