Use Daus
Ilse "Sili" Daus (born January 31, 1911 in Vienna , Austria-Hungary as Ilse Kantor ; died 2000 in Israel ) was an Austrian-Israeli book illustrator .
Life
Ilse Kantor's parents Alfred Kantor (1874–1931) and Therese Berg (1878–1941) came from German- Jewish families in Prague . Alfred had been transferred as a manager of a Prague alcohol factory to the branch in Vienna, where Therese managed a branch of her parents' smoked goods production and where they married at the end of 1900. Ilse was the younger sister of the later writer Friedrich Torberg , who derived his pseudonym from the name of his parents. Her older sister Sidonie ("Sidi") (1902–1941) and her mother were deported to the Litzmannstadt ghetto on November 3, 1941 , where they perished.
After the First World War, the family moved back to Prague in 1921, where Ilse attended arts and crafts and art history courses. Between 1926 and 1927 she took lessons at the École des Beaux Arts in Tours and later ran a workshop for fashionable leather goods as an artisan in Prague. In 1935, she typed the novel The Team for her brother . Novel of a sports life in fair copy.
After the German occupation of Czechoslovakia on March 15, 1939, she emigrated to Palestine in October 1939 , accompanying a group of children from Prague to Haifa via Vienna and Trieste. There she lived in Kibbutz Chefziba and got a job as an art teacher at the "Oranim Teachers' College " in Kirjat Tiw'on in northern Israel. She received orders to illustrate school, reading and children's books. The children's book Bo elai, parpar neḥmad by Fania Bergstein, which she illustrated in 1945, was to have a circulation of over 500,000 copies.
In Israel she married the composer Avraham Daus , who had to emigrate from Germany in 1933 and had lived in Palestine since 1936. They have two daughters, Tamar and Tirsa.
Fonts
- Fania Bergstein: Bo elai, parpar neḥmad , Tel-Aviv. Hotsaʼat ha-Ḳibuts ha-meʼuḥad. 712 [1951 or 1952] (Hebrew). Picture stories about the animals and things in an agricultural kibbutz.
- Ilse Daus: Friedrich Torberg - Parents, childhood and youth , 17-page typescript 1988 (proof from David Axmann)
literature
- Ursula Seeber (Hrsg.): Small allies: expelled Austrian children's and youth literature , Austrian library in exile. Vienna: Picus-Verl. , 1998 ISBN 3-85452-276-2 . Short bio p. 115
- David Axmann: Friedrich Torberg. The biography , Langen Müller: Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-7844-3138-3 .
- Alisa Douer : New territory. Israeli artists of Austrian origin. Picus, Vienna 1997, ISBN 3-85452-407-2 , p. 110f. (Book accompanying the exhibition of the same name).
Web links
Individual evidence
- ^ David Axmann: Friedrich Torberg. The biography , p. 89f
- ^ David Axmann: Friedrich Torberg. The biography , p. 84f
- ^ David Axmann: Friedrich Torberg. The biography , p. 119
- ↑ Oranim Academic College ( Memento of the original from October 29, 2016 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. , see also English Wikipedia : Oranim Academic College
- ↑ Bo elai, parpar neḥmad at worldcat
- ↑ Fania Bergstein see English Wikipedia en: Fania Bergstein
- ↑ Ursula Seeber: Small allies: expelled Austrian children's and youth literature , p. 69. Two illustrations from the children's book on p. 73
personal data | |
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SURNAME | Daus, Ilse |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Daus-Cantor, Ilse; Kantor, Ilse (maiden name) |
BRIEF DESCRIPTION | Austrian-Israeli illustrator |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 31, 1911 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Vienna |
DATE OF DEATH | 2000 |
Place of death | Israel |