About Mira
Born in Tel Aviv, Mira Kliger graduated from the Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Jerusalem. She illustrated regularly for leading national newspapers Haaretz and Maariv’s "At" women’s magazine in Israel, as well as independent projects including artwork for musicians such as Gidi Gov.
Moving to the UK in 1979, she built a successful career in advertising and design with a major advertising agency, working for international clients such as L'Oréal, Yves Saint Laurent, and Procter & Gamble. Among other projects, she designed and illustrated the "Leonardo's Studio" pop-up book for the National Gallery, London.
Concentrating on painting since 2000, Mira’s had solo exhibitions in Paris, London, and Tel Aviv, as well as group shows in the UK, Israel and Germany.
In the press
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“In her first Paris solo exhibition, the British/Israeli artist Mira Kliger, is exhibiting a selection of life drawings and oil paintings. Entitled "The Longing Body”, the exhibition at the Galerie du Forez in Paris' Marais neighborhood showcases a selection of the artist's drawings of male and female nude, as well as a few oil paintings, which also deal with the subject of longing, of yearning. Known for her oil portraits and narrative compositions, Kliger is however dedicated to drawing, to the pure "naked" line, impossible to imitate or fake. "Drawing is like the human voice singing without the orchestra accompaniment" says the artist.
The 15 drawings on show, selected from hundreds, are testament to the power of the line, its amazing ability to create form and depth, to mimic life and to bring out its deeper meanings. Working in charcoal, pencil, conte, and acrylic, Kliger creates life nudes and dream scenes, often on the same canvas.” Adriana Dredge, Wall Street Journal
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“Using a palette of subdued local colours with an abundance of underpainting, she does little to glorify the sensuality of her subjects' flesh or intimacy of their bodies.
Essentially Kliger wraps the figures skeletons in paint, tooling the pigment as if it were a sculptural medium. Following the contours of predetermined positions and flat lighting, her brush moves like a chopping knife in and out of concave and convex forms, defining the solidity of muscular flesh without relying on linear outlines.” Gil Goldfine, The Jerusalem Post
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“Mira Kliger's studios in Thames Ditton, London and Tel Aviv are permanently populated by friends, family and biblical characters. Mira's figurative style, reminescent of post-war East European realism, bring her characters to life in a disconcerting fashion. For commissioned portraits, the decisive colours and warm, sympathetic approach means a strong resemblance with the subject, as well as a new, almost surprising interpretation of it.
With vigorous strokes and classic composition, the Old Testament Tales tell an optimistic story of continuous human suffering and eternal hope. The characters represent us, our parents and our children, as well as Adam, Eve, or Job. They find themselvers in situations parallel to our own, and they survive, they move on, stronger, Life goes on.” Adriana Dredge, Senior Lecturer, UAL
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“Her paintings, titled 'With Modigliani', treat her subjects in Modigliani's poses, themselves quoted from those of the Old Masters. Kliger follows in their footsteps and structures her work geometrically, creating balanced compositions = subject and background.
As in the best classical tradition, the style of her painting is detailed. She follows the folds of the body, the creases of the sheets and the tones of the skin. And more, the brushwork is rhythmical and multi-layered. It plays on the emotions true to the subject and atmosphere of the works. Starting with small touches, soft and sensitive and ending with maelstrom of strokes, rich in volume.” Ilan Nahshon, IAA artist & cultural critic
“My works are born of an intimate emotional process - somewhat like revealing oneself. The process of painting is an adventure in form, colour and line which can be created by brush, knife, hand or in fact with any means. A kind of ritual dance - at times gently, at others in anger. In the process, parallel worlds come to be with their own laws of nature, their own stories. There are not always intended to bear pleasure but to leave lingering questions.”