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Michael Gorban
was born in 1956 in the former Soviet Union. In 1976, Gorban graduated
from the Kishinev Higher School for the Painting Arts in Moldavia
and in 1982, he graduated from the Academy for Painting in the
city of Lvov, majoring in graphics. Gorban received a grant in
1988-1990 from the Artist's Association of the Soviet Union, and
he emigrated to Israel with his family in 1990.
It is doubtful whether any other artist studied art for 21 years
before displaying his paintings on the market. Michael Gorban
completed his studies at age 30, with a record behind him of working
closely with the finest of Russian artists, and using dozens of
painting techniques. At age 30, Gorban received the honor of exhibiting
his paintings at an international exhibition beside the likes
of Salvador Dalí, Kandinsky, Chagall, and others, in the
Hermitage museum in Leningrad. A third of Gorban's paintings hung
in the Hermitage, one of the world's largest and most prestigious
museums, for more than a year. Gorban managed to receive a 140
square meter studio in Moscow from the government. In the national
album of Russian art history, Gorban is prominently featured with
three of his paintings as one of the young artists to impact the
20th century between 1960 and 1980. "Painting is a sensual
experience," claims Gorban today from his studio in Petach
Tikva, near Tel Aviv. "I will not sign my name until I am
completely satisfied." Concerning the subtle difference between
an artist and a painter, he adds, "An artist can hear what
the painting wants; a painter cannot. I never painted under duress
or according to order. My success comes from people feeling the
same satisfaction that I myself felt upon completing the painting."
In 1990, Gorban decided to emigrate to Israel. The fact of his
Jewishness had been repressed for years and was unknown to most
people. Yet, feeling a special warmth for Israel, Gorban resolved
to leave everything behind - the exhibitions, the recognition,
the spacious Moscow studio, the summer cottage on the Black Sea
- and make the move to Israel. Michael Gorban's paintings are
now displayed in galleries and museums throughout the Soviet Union,
as well as private collections in the United States, Canada, England,
Japan, Belgium, France, Germany, Australia and Israel. His name
has returned to the headlines, not as a leading Russian artist,
but as a first-rate Israeli artist.
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