
רבי ישראל מאיר קגן
An expressive portrait of rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan with a full white beard and a black head covering. The face is painted with bold, loose brushstrokes, blending warm tones of red, orange, and gold with white and black. His gaze is deep, calm, and contemplative, conveying wisdom, life experience, and inner strength. The soft gray background remains understated, allowing the face to become the focal point of the composition. The contrast between light and shadow enhances the facial features and emotional depth, while the painterly, expressive style gives the artwork a vivid, human, and deeply moving presence.

הודיה זפרן
Odaya is a French-Israeli painter whose work explores human emotions, memory, spirituality, and the invisible connections between people. Through expressive portraits, vibrant color compositions, and an almost living sense of movement, she seeks to reveal the inner world of her subjects beyond mere aesthetic representation. Inspired by music, Middle Eastern roots, personal history, nature, and Judaism, her artistic universe blends softness, strength, and emotional depth. Her paintings often portray closed eyes, musicians, figures in motion, or faces immersed in light and shadow — moments suspended between meditation and introspection. A mother of four children, Odaya places values of transmission, healing, and authenticity at the heart of her work. For her, painting is a sensitive, intuitive, and deeply human language in which every piece tells a story of emotion, presence, and memory.
Odaya is a French-Israeli painter whose work explores human emotions, memory, spirituality, and the invisible connections between people. Through expressive portraits, vibrant color compositions, and an almost living sense of movement, she seeks to reveal the inner world of her subjects beyond mere aesthetic representation. Inspired by music, Middle Eastern roots, personal history, nature, and Judaism, her artistic universe blends softness, strength, and emotional depth. Her paintings often portray closed eyes, musicians, figures in motion, or faces immersed in light and shadow — moments suspended between meditation and introspection. A mother of four children, Odaya places values of transmission, healing, and authenticity at the heart of her work. For her, painting is a sensitive, intuitive, and deeply human language in which every piece tells a story of emotion, presence, and memory.

