2-3 minutes are absolutely fine – These were my instructions from our gracious moderator.
With your permission, I'll start with a personal note.
There were THREE Shamir brothers. The two graphic artists and Leon- an opera singer. He did not emigrate from Latvia, but was deported to Germany after his parents – my grandparents - his wife and daughter were murdered during the Nazi occupation.
Tonight we are four Shamirs here at the National Libray : My wife and partner Ruby, my brother Odi and his partner Butzit. Two more, Uri and Uda, will come from England to the opening at the Great Amber Hall in April
And the last personal note: My middle name is Eliezer, after Lieutenant Eliezer Freidberg, the Brothers' youngest uncle who fell in the Latvian war of independence. He is commemorated on the monument for the "Jewish Liberators", designed in 1934 by his nephews, here in Riga.
When Ambassador Bar-Sadeh suggested in a meeting in Jerusalem that I will curate a Shamir exhibition in 2018, my first reaction was panic: How will I represent their oeuvre–some 3000 works – in one exhibition. I need a theme to cut the number to a reasonable size. The theme that I suggested to Ambassador Bar-Sade was independence, which is celebrated especially this year in both our countries.
In my mind independence is not only symbols of sovereignty –emblem of the state, flag, bank notes, postage stamps, medals – but hard work of building a nation and building a country. These aspects of independence are reflected in Shamir works in this exhibition in all branches of graphics.
To characterize the Shamir Studio both here and in Tel Aviv, I would mention three features:
Uncompromising drive to excellence.
Total commitment to the clients' goals.
European orientation with Bauhaus influence.
This exhibition owes a great debt to three people for their creative thinking and devotion: Ambassador Lironne Bar-Sadeh, the initiator of the exhibition; Cultural attache Marika Pinke, my consultant and guide; and Aviv Moses, the designer and producer of both exhibition and catalogue.
And one last word: The medal produced by The Embassy in honor of our father and uncle is indeed an honor that they, designers of medals themselves, could not have dreamed. Thank you very much