Skip to main content

Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Israeli, Polish, 1937-1992
Shlomo Katz was born 1937 in Lodz, Poland and he immigrated to Palestine in 1945 at the age of eight. He went to school at Kibbutz Mishmar Ha'emek, and his teachers noticed his artistic ability from the beginning. He then went to Paris to pursue art where he studied at the Ecole de Beaux Arts. It was there that he developed his original technique of oil painting on a gilded metal surface. This gold surface and his rich colors resemble oriental miniatures and medieval icons. Katz’s serigraphs became the ultimate in modern printmaking and in 1985 he was commissioned by the Falcon Foundation to design 9 large pieces of art for the chapel at the United States Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, now considered a National Treasure. Katz's works are featured in galleries and museums in Israel, Australia, France, Hungary, United States, and England.
to
1
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
4
1,330
986
773
756
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
2
2
Artist: Shlomo Katz
Haggadah of Passover, Portfolio of Lithographs by Shlomo Katz 1978
By Shlomo Katz
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Shlomo Katz, Polish/Israeli (1937 - 1992) Title: Hagada of Passover Portfolio Year: 1978 Medium: Portfolio of 12 Lithographs (plus 2 more), each signed in pencil Edition: 350...
Category

1970s Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Haggadah of Passover, Suite of Folk Art 13 Lithographs by Shlomo Katz 1978
By Shlomo Katz
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Shlomo Katz, Polish/Israeli (1937 - 1992) Date: 1978 Set of 13 Lithographs, signed in pencil Edition size: 350 Image Size: 23 x 18 inches Size: 29 x 21 in. (73.66 x 53.34 cm)
Category

1970s Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Related Items
Modernist FOLK ART Original Pencil Lithograph "GRAY DAY AT THE BEACH"
By Doris Lee
Located in New York, NY
Doris Lee Lithograph 1964 Edition Size: 250 Image Size: 12 x 9.5 inches Sheet Size: 16.75 x 13 inches Reference: AAA 1532 Signed lower left Condition: Good Provenance: ASA Doris Emr...
Category

1960s Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Archival Pigment

Hand signed Folk Art Naive lithograph on Japon Paper Paris French Country Scene
By Michel Delacroix
Located in Surfside, FL
Château de Cheverny in the Loire Valley of France Lithograph in colors depicting an enchanted evening at Cheverny with a horse drawn wagon and carriages on a winter day, Signed in...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Leaving Home (97-301), 5 color lithograph on Rives BFK paper, Signed/N Tamarind
By DeLoss McGraw
Located in New York, NY
DeLoss McGraw Leaving Home (97-301), 1997 Five color lithograph on tan Rives BFK paper with deckled edges Signed and numbered 3/75 in graphite pencil on the front 17 × 24 3/25 inches...
Category

1990s Outsider Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

The Treasured Land, Judaica Folk Art
By Michoel Muchnik
Located in Surfside, FL
Michoel Muchnik was born in Philadelphia in 1952. Muchnik received his artistic training at the Rhode Island School of Design. He later studied Jewish and Talmudic studies at the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, New Jersey. Michoel Muchnik's art focuses on imaginative and joyful depictions of traditional and mystical Jewish and Hasidic themes. Muchnik has exhibited his work and lectured on Hasidic art throughout the United States as well as abroad. In 1977, Muchnik was selected alongside four other Hasidic artists, including Hendel Lieberman...
Category

Late 20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

1961 Modernist FOLK ART Original Pencil Lithograph “Along the Waterway”
By Doris Lee
Located in New York, NY
Doris Lee Lithograph “Along the Waterway” 1961 Image Size: 10 1/16 x 14 in inches Sheet Size: 12 7/8 x 16 5/16inches Signed lower left Condition: Good Provenance: ASA Doris Emrick L...
Category

1960s Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Archival Pigment

Israeli Folk Art Hebrew Naive Judaica Lithograph Jewish Holiday Shavuot
By Shalom Moskovitz
Located in Surfside, FL
Vintage pencil signed and numbered limited edition lithograph on deckle edged Arches paper. Shalom of Sefad (Shulem der Zeigermacher in Yiddish Shalom Moskowitz) Shalom of Tzfat lived for over seventeen years in his native town of Safed in the hills of the Galilee. There he worked as a watchmaker, stonemason and silversmith, during the 50's. Since then this self-taught artist has achieved an international reputation. Shalom is a naive painter, but not a rustic one, he expresses a very elaborate way of thinking in his own way. While belonging to Hasidism, Shalom of Safed uses his artistic talents positively. 'I don't paint', he explains, 'to tell the story of the Bible in color and lines. His works have been exhibited in prominent museums and galleries in Europe and the United States, and are included in the collections of the Museums of Modern Art in Paris and New York, the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, the Modern Museum in Stockholm and the Jewish Museum in New York He has exhibited alongside all of the Israeli great artists. Israel has had a Vibrant Folk Art, Naive art scene for a long time now artists like Yisrael Paldi, Nahum Guttman, Reuven Rubin and even Yefim Ladizhinsky had naive periods. The most well know if the strict naive artists are Shalom of Safed, Irene Awret...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Hand signed Folk Art Naive lithograph on Arches Paper Paris Snowman Scene
By Michel Delacroix
Located in Surfside, FL
Lithograph in colors depicting an enchanted evening in Paris with a snowman and children playing outside the restaurant Chez Joseph on a winter day. Signed in bottom right margin "M...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Singing in the Bath, Tenakee Springs
Located in San Francisco, CA
This artwork titled "Singing in the Bath, Tenakee Springs" 1996 is a color offset lithograph on paper by noted American artist Rie Mounier Munoz, 1921-2015. It is hand signed and numbered 1077/1100 in pencil by the artist. The image size is 13.5 x 10 inches, sheet size is 16 x 12.35 inches. It is in excellent condition, has never been framed. About the artist: Alaska painter Rie Mounier Munoz was the child of Dutch parents who immigrated to California, where she was born and raised. She is known for her colorful scenes of everyday life in Alaska. Rie (from Marie) Munoz (moo nyos), studied art at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. In 1950, she traveled up the Inside Passage by steamship, fell in love with Juneau, and gave herself until the boat left the next day to find a job and a place to live. Since then Juneau has been home to Munoz. She began painting small vignettes of Alaska soon after arriving in Juneau, and also studied art at the University of Alaska-Juneau. Munoz painted in oils in what she describes as a "painstakingly realistic" style, which she found stiff and "somewhat boring." Her breakthrough came a few years later when an artist friend introduced her to a versatile, water-soluble paint called casein. The immediacy of this inexpensive medium prompted an entirely new style. Rie's paintings became colorful and carefree, mirroring her own optimistic attitude toward life. With her newfound technique she set about recording everyday scenes of Alaskans at work and at play. Of the many jobs she has held journalist, teacher, museum curator, artist, mother, Munoz recalls one of her most memorable was as a teacher on King Island in 1951, where she taught 25 Eskimo children. The island was a 13-hour umiak (a walrus skin boat) voyage from Nome, an experience she remembers vividly. After teaching in the Inupiat Eskimo village on the island with her husband during one school year, she felt a special affinity for Alaska's Native peoples and deliberately set about recording their traditional lifestyles that she knew to be changing very fast. For the next twenty years, Rie practiced her art as a "Sunday painter," in and around prospecting with her husband, raising a son, and working as a freelance commercial artist, illustrator, cartoonist, and curator of exhibits for the Alaska State Museum. During her years in Alaska, Munoz has lived in a variety of small Alaskan communities, including prospecting and mining camps. Her paintings reflect an interest in the day-to-day activities of village life such as fishing, berry picking, children at play, as well as her love of folklore and legends. Munoz says that what has appealed to her most were "images you might not think an artist would want to paint," such as people butchering crab, skinning a seal, or doing their laundry in a hand-cranked washing machine. In 1972, with her hand-cut stencil and serigraph prints selling well in four locations in Alaska, she felt confident enough to leave her job at the Alaska State Museum and devote herself full time to her art. Freed from the constraints of an office job, she began to produce close to a hundred paintings a year, in addition to stone lithograph and serigraph prints. From her earliest days as an artist, Rie had firm beliefs about selling her work. First, she insisted the edition size should be kept modest. When she decided in 1973 to reproduce Eskimo Story Teller as an offset lithography print and found the minimum print run to be 500, she destroyed 200 of the prints. She did the same with King Island, her second reproduction. Reluctantly, to meet market demand, she increased the edition size of the reproductions to 500 and then 750. The editions stayed at that level for almost ten years before climbing to 950 and 1250. Her work has been exhibited many solo watercolor exhibits in Alaska, Oregon and Washington State, including the Charles and Emma Frye Art Museum, Alaska State Museum in Juneau, Anchorage Historical and Fine Arts Museum, Tongass Historical Museum in Ketchikan, and Yukon Regional Library in Whitehorse; Yukon Territory, and included in exhibits at the Smithsonian Institute and Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C. Munozs paintings have graced the covers of countless publications, from cookbooks to mail order catalogs, and been published in magazines, newspapers, posters, calendars, and two previous collections of her work: Rie Munoz...
Category

Late 20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

American Folk Blues Festival poster 1969 by Gunther Kieser (Blues music)
By Günther Kieser
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Gunther Kieser American Folk Blues Festival poster 1969: Keiser's Blues guitar poster for the annual Hamburg festival devoted to American folk blues feat...
Category

1960s Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Autumn in New York by Jane Wooster Scott
By Jane Wooster Scott
Located in New York, NY
Jane Wooster Scott (American, b. 1920) Autumn in New York, c. 20th Century Lithograph Sight: 15 x 12 in. Framed: 27 3/4 x 23 3/4 x 1 in. Signed and titled lower right in plate: Autum...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Israeli Naive Art Screen Print Lithograph Jerusalem, Sanhedrin Old City Folk Art
By Gabriel Cohen
Located in Surfside, FL
Bold color lithograph, hand signed in pencil and numbered AP IX/X (artist’s proof 9/10), Jerusalem Print Workshop blind stamp lower right. On French Arches paper. Gabriel Cohen, Sel...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Screen

Steam Bath, Aniak
Located in San Francisco, CA
This artwork titled "Steam Bath, Aniak" 1995 is a color offset lithograph on paper by noted American artist Rie Mounier Munoz, 1921-2015. It is hand signed and numbered 38/950 in pencil by the artist. The image size is 6.75 x 10 inches, sheet size is 10.5 x 14 inches. It is in excellent condition.. About the artist: Alaska painter Rie Mounier Munoz was the child of Dutch parents who immigrated to California, where she was born and raised. She is known for her colorful scenes of everyday life in Alaska. Rie (from Marie) Munoz (moo nyos), studied art at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. In 1950, she traveled up the Inside Passage by steamship, fell in love with Juneau, and gave herself until the boat left the next day to find a job and a place to live. Since then Juneau has been home to Munoz. She began painting small vignettes of Alaska soon after arriving in Juneau, and also studied art at the University of Alaska-Juneau. Munoz painted in oils in what she describes as a "painstakingly realistic" style, which she found stiff and "somewhat boring." Her breakthrough came a few years later when an artist friend introduced her to a versatile, water-soluble paint called casein. The immediacy of this inexpensive medium prompted an entirely new style. Rie's paintings became colorful and carefree, mirroring her own optimistic attitude toward life. With her newfound technique she set about recording everyday scenes of Alaskans at work and at play. Of the many jobs she has held journalist, teacher, museum curator, artist, mother, Munoz recalls one of her most memorable was as a teacher on King Island in 1951, where she taught 25 Eskimo children. The island was a 13-hour umiak (a walrus skin boat) voyage from Nome, an experience she remembers vividly. After teaching in the Inupiat Eskimo village on the island with her husband during one school year, she felt a special affinity for Alaska's Native peoples and deliberately set about recording their traditional lifestyles that she knew to be changing very fast. For the next twenty years, Rie practiced her art as a "Sunday painter," in and around prospecting with her husband, raising a son, and working as a freelance commercial artist, illustrator, cartoonist, and curator of exhibits for the Alaska State Museum. During her years in Alaska, Munoz has lived in a variety of small Alaskan communities, including prospecting and mining camps. Her paintings reflect an interest in the day-to-day activities of village life such as fishing, berry picking, children at play, as well as her love of folklore and legends. Munoz says that what has appealed to her most were "images you might not think an artist would want to paint," such as people butchering crab, skinning a seal, or doing their laundry in a hand-cranked washing machine. In 1972, with her hand-cut stencil and serigraph prints selling well in four locations in Alaska, she felt confident enough to leave her job at the Alaska State Museum and devote herself full time to her art. Freed from the constraints of an office job, she began to produce close to a hundred paintings a year, in addition to stone lithograph and serigraph prints. From her earliest days as an artist, Rie had firm beliefs about selling her work. First, she insisted the edition size should be kept modest. When she decided in 1973 to reproduce Eskimo Story Teller as an offset lithography print and found the minimum print run to be 500, she destroyed 200 of the prints. She did the same with King Island, her second reproduction. Reluctantly, to meet market demand, she increased the edition size of the reproductions to 500 and then 750. The editions stayed at that level for almost ten years before climbing to 950 and 1250. Her work has been exhibited many solo watercolor exhibits in Alaska, Oregon and Washington State, including the Charles and Emma Frye Art Museum, Alaska State Museum in Juneau, Anchorage Historical and Fine Arts Museum, Tongass Historical Museum in Ketchikan, and Yukon Regional Library in Whitehorse; Yukon Territory, and included in exhibits at the Smithsonian Institute and Russell Senate Office Building in Washington, D.C. Munozs paintings have graced the covers of countless publications, from cookbooks to mail order catalogs, and been published in magazines, newspapers, posters, calendars, and two previous collections of her work: Rie Munoz...
Category

Late 20th Century Folk Art Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Steam Bath, Aniak
Steam Bath, Aniak
H 10.5 in W 14 in D 0.01 in
Previously Available Items
"Moses in a Basket" Serigraph Edition 298/300 from the Passover Portfolio (2/10)
By Shlomo Katz
Located in Houston, TX
Richly colored serigraph print by artist Shlomo Katz titled "Moses in a Basket" featuring the Pharaoh's daughter first seeing baby Moses in a basket. While published in the 1980s, Katz's style captures the rich blue tones and the bright gold backgrounds of the Byzantine style. This work is number 2 of 10 from Katz's Passover Portfolio. The work is signed, titled, and editioned along the lower margin. Currently hung in complimentary gold frame with a white matting. Dimensions Without Frame: H 18 in. x W 24 in. Artist Biography: Shlomo Katz was born 1937 in Lodz, Poland and he immigrated to Palestine in 1945 at the age of eight. He went to school at Kibbutz Mishmar Ha'emek, and his teachers noticed his artistic ability from the beginning. He then went to Paris to pursue art where he studied at the Ecole de Beaux Arts. It was there that he developed his original technique of oil painting on a gilded metal surface. This gold surface and his rich colors resemble oriental miniatures and medieval icons...
Category

1980s Byzantine Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

"The Ten Commandments" Serigraph Edition 298/300 from the Passover Portfolio
By Shlomo Katz
Located in Houston, TX
Richly colored serigraph print by artist Shlomo Katz titled "The Ten Commandments" featuring Moses looking down from the mountain at his people's betrayal with the Golden Calf. While published in the 1980s, Katz's style captures the rich blue tones and the bright gold backgrounds of the Byzantine style. This work is number 7 of 10 from Katz's Passover Portfolio. The work is signed, titled, and editioned along the lower margin. Currently hung in complimentary gold frame with a white matting. Dimensions Without Frame: H 18 in. x W 24 in. Artist Biography: Shlomo Katz was born 1937 in Lodz, Poland and he immigrated to Palestine in 1945 at the age of eight. He went to school at Kibbutz Mishmar Ha'emek, and his teachers noticed his artistic ability from the beginning. He then went to Paris to pursue art where he studied at the Ecole de Beaux Arts. It was there that he developed his original technique of oil painting on a gilded metal surface. This gold surface and his rich colors resemble medieval icons...
Category

1980s Byzantine Shlomo Katz Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Shlomo Katz prints and multiples for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Shlomo Katz prints and multiples available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Shlomo Katz in lithograph and more. Not every interior allows for large Shlomo Katz prints and multiples, so small editions measuring 12 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of R.C. Gorman, Valton Tyler, and Ralph Fasanella. Shlomo Katz prints and multiples prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $2,000 and tops out at $3,600, while the average work can sell for $2,800.

Recently Viewed

View All