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  1. The straw hat dates from the phase of Mark Gertler’s career when he enjoyed his greatest commercial and critical success, and ranked among Britain’s most talked-about younger artists. It follows the poignant portraits of his Jewish family and pre-dates his hotly coloured cubist semi-abstracts. Gertler grew up in London’s impoverished East ...

  2. 15 de jul. de 2019 · Mark Gertler, New York University and NBER. working papers NBER Reporter NBER Digest Bulletin on Retirement and Disability Bulletin on Health Bulletin on Entrepreneurship conference reports video lectures interviews.

  3. Mark Gertler's 30 research works with 3,887 citations and 4,402 reads, including: Unemployment Fluctuations, Match Quality, and the Wage Cyclicality of New Hires

  4. Mark Gertler, born Marks Gertler, was a British painter of figure subjects, portraits and still-life. His early life and his relationship with Dora Carrington were the inspiration for Gilbert Cannan's novel Mendel. The characters of Loerke in D. H. Lawrence's Women in Love, and Gombauld in Aldous Huxley's Crome Yellow were based on him.

  5. Merry-Go-Round. Mark Gertler 1916. Tate Britain. London, United Kingdom. This work was painted at the height of the First World War, which seems to be its subject. Men and women in rigid poses, their mouths crying in silent unison, seem trapped on a carousel that revolves endlessly. Gertler was a conscientious objector.

  6. Mark Gertler 1914. Three years out of the Slade, Gertler ’s work became increasingly experimental. 'Rabbi and Rabbitzin', executed on the eve of the First World War, captures the tension between the traditional way of life depicted and the incipient warfare which threatens to overwhelm it. The concentrated, almost claustrophobic domestic ...

  7. 30 de oct. de 2019 · BURU (the Ben Uri Research Unit) is proud to announce the exhibition, Mark Gertler: Paintings from the Collection of Luke Gertler & selected important UK collections, showcasing five important paintings from the Estate of the artist’s son, Luke Gertler (1932–2017), which are on loan from Art Fund: The Artist’s Parents (c. 1909–10), The Artist’s Brother, Harry (c. 1911),