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AN ISRAELI HAMMERED-IRON HANUKKAH LAMP

BY DAVID PALOMBO (1920-1966), MID-20TH CENTURY

Details
AN ISRAELI HAMMERED-IRON HANUKKAH LAMP
BY DAVID PALOMBO (1920-1966), MID-20TH CENTURY
Modeled as an asymmetrical, tree-like structure resembling three Hebrew letters shin (ש), the branches rise from a central stem with angled supports at the base, each branch upturned and terminating with a cylindrical sconce
14 in. (36 cm.) high
Provenance
Menorah Galleries, New York.
Literature
Gideon Ofrat, One Hundred Years of Art in Israel, Boulder, Westview Press, 1998.
David Palombo: Sculpture and Paintings, exhibition catalogue, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, 1968.
Yad Vashem Museum Archives.

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Lot Essay

David Palombo (1920–1966)
David Palombo was an Israeli sculptor and painter whose work is characterized by the use of raw, hand-forged materials—primarily iron and stone. Born in Turkey in 1920, he immigrated to Jerusalem as a child. He studied at the Bezalel Academy of Arts and Design and later became a teacher there. Palombo developed a distinctive visual language grounded in abstraction, weight, and texture, often integrating welded iron forms with architectural structures.
His major public commissions include the gates of the Hall of Remembrance at Yad Vashem (1960) and the gates of the Knesset (1966). These works reflect his interest in monumental scale, ritual symbolism, and the expressive possibilities of metalwork. Palombo died in a motorcycle accident in 1966 at the age of 46.