Archie Granot is a papercutting artist based in Israel. He works in traditional Jewish art, including ketubahs (ketubot), mizrachs, mezuzahs, haggadah and blessings for the Jewish life cycle, etc. Archie was born in London, England in 1946 and moved to Israel in 1967.[1]

Granot uses a scalpel to produce his papercut works, rather than the scissors which are more common with other artists. Granot's use of Hebrew inscriptions, handcut in calligraphic letters in his Jewish papercuts, is an integral part of his work. Many of the texts relate to Jerusalem, Judaism and Israel as he draws inspiration of the Holy City.

Recent works include his Papercut Haggadah[1] on which he worked for nearly a decade. The Haggadah consists of 55 individual works in which all elements, text as well as design, have been cut by scalpel.

Citations

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  1. ^ "Haggadah - the Papercut Haggadah by Archie Granot". Archived from the original on 2015-01-14. Retrieved 2020-06-20.

Sources

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