Ismar David was born on 27 August 1910, in Breslau (Wrocław), then part of the German Empire, to Rosa and Wolff David.[1][2] He was apprenticed to a house painter in Breslau from 1925 to 1928, when he went to Berlin.[3] There, he went to art school at Städtische Kunstgewerbe- und Handwerkerschule in Charlottenburg.[4]
He left school in 1932 and moved to Jerusalem,[5] then under the Mandate for Palestine, where he worked with the Jewish National Fund to design golden books—works in which the fund's donors were profiled.[6][7] While in Jerusalem, David began to design a typeface family for the Hebrew script called David Hebrew.[5]
David settled permanently in New York City in 1953.[8][9] David's art often accompanied religious texts.[10]
He died on 26 February 1996 in New York City.[1][11]
Ismar David Archive
The Cary Graphic Arts Collection, a rare book library on the history of graphic communication, holds the Ismar David Papers. The collection contains correspondence, personal papers, photographs, writings, artwork, and publications that document David's life and career.[12]
Publications
The Hebrew Letter: Calligraphic Variations (1990)[13]
^ abKelly, Jerry; Koeth, Alice, eds. (2000). Artist & Alphabet: Twentieth Century Calligraphy and Letter Art in America. Godine. p. 121. ISBN1-56792-137-X. OCLC43927537.