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The Artists.... Julie
and Omri Rotblatt-Amrany are a husband-wife team of sculptors and
painters who founded The Studio of Rotblatt-Amrany in Highland Park,
Illinois. Julie Rotblatt-Amrany Born
in Chicago in 1958, Julie Rotblatt-Amrany has art degrees from the Art
Institute of Chicago and the University of Colorado. She also studied at
University of California at Davis, and in Bordeaux, France. Julie has
taught figure sculpture through the continuing education program at the
Art Institute of Chicago. Julie
is an international painter and sculptor who is best known as a
visionary artist. Her mediums are color and form, those of long-lasting
capabilities. Working and studying in Italy, she experimented with
various stones and Italian marbles while continuing with plaster and
clay. Her forms and subject matter are mainly figurative. Her
vibrant oils, conducive to mural and monumental-sized pieces, are
collected both privately and publicly. One of her dreams is to combine
her sculpture and painting expertise in a single large artwork - a
sculpture and painting ensemble. To
her sculpture credit - as well as Omri’s - is “The Spirit” - the
16-foot bronze of Michael Jordan at United Center in Chicago. Also, the
10-foot bronze of Fr. John Smyth at Marybille City of Youth in Des
Plaines, Illinois. For “The Spirit,” Julie received an award of
special merit for public art form the Chicago Bar Association. In 1998,
she painted a 10-foot-wide painting for the Kellogg Cancer Care Unit of
Evanston Hospital, an in 1999, she co-sculpted with Omri a large project for the
Detroit tigers - five 8-foot tall figures in stainless steel. In 1997,
she created a new bronze of St. Therese of Lisieux, Edition 9 for the
Carmelite Monastery of Philadelphia. In 1999, she completed a seven-foot
bronze bas relief of Our Lady of Mount Carmel for the 100-year-old Mount
Carmel High School in Chicago, Edition 6. Omri
Amrany Omri
Amrany is an international artist with multi-faced specialties in bronze
and metal sculpture, marble sculpture, painting and drawing. His
exhibitions and collections span the United States, Israel and Europe. A
naturalized U.S. citizen, Omri was born and raised in a family of
artists on Kibbutz Ashdot Yaalov Meuchad in Israel. Mostly a self-taught
artist in Israel, he studied marble carving in Italy as well, where he
met Julie. Though famous for his large-scale figure sculptures -
especially sports notables - Omri is a fine artist with a history of
challenging original works combining traditional and montage elements. Omri’s
energetic style encompasses sculpture montage, realism and futurism,
combining style with exploration of new methods of technology in the use
of materials. He is working with the concept of the “fractal” in
geometry, and integrates the fractal philosophically and technically
into his works. Omri has perfected the electroforming technique in metal
sculpture, and the use of white bronze in figure sculpture. The 12-foot
sculpture “Harry Caray,” unveiled by The Chicago Cubs in 1999, is a
white bronze.
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