- Fabian, Fredy
- Fadel, Mohamed
- Fain, Dan
- Fain, Maureen
- Fainaru, Belu Simion
- Fainburg, Lena
- Faktor, Shirley
- Falk, Michael
- Farag, Ben
- Farah, Hanna Fouad
- Faran, Nomi
- Farba, Yitzhak
- Farber, Eldar
- Farbmann, Max (Mordechai)
- Farhi, Avraham
- Farhi, Yosef
- Farkash Fishof, Eva
- Farkash, Alisa
- Farri, Grete
- Farro, Judith
- Fast, Omer
- Fawakhry, Ashraf
- Faytchevitz, Emanuel
- Fedarschneider, Miri
- Feder, David
- Feder, Maryla
- Feferberg, Nili
- Feige, Rose
- Feigenblatt, Ruth
- Feigin, Dov
- Feigin, Ruth
- Feigowitz Goddard, Dorit
- Feiler, Avi
- Feiler, Dror
- Fein, Haim H.
- Fein, Hanan
- Fein, Leon (Arie)
- Feinberg, Ruth
- Feiner, Dov
- Feingersh, Oded
- Feingold, Mark
- Feingold, Nathan
- Feinstein, Chana
- Feinstein, Sylvia
- Feld, Irving
- Feldesh, George
- Feldman, Asher
- Feldman, Aya
- Feldman, Clara
- Feldman, Dorit
- Feldman, Jakov
- Feldman, Nir
- Feller, Tova
- Fenichel, Abba
- Fenichel, Haimi
- Feniger, Ofer
- Fenster, Esther
- Fenyo, Emmery
- Ferber, Zahi
- Ferdo, Avraham
- Ferenci, Hedva
- Ferguson, Walter
- Ferrer, Marlen
- Ferster, Reut
- Feuerstein, Mordecai
- Fields, Danny
- Figueiredo, Eunice
- Filer, Sara
- Filos, Shalom
- Fima (Roytenberg, Ephraim)
- Fima, Corinne
- Fine, Annette
- Fine, David (1)
- Fine, David (2)
- Fink, Bernie
- Fink, Uri
- Finkel, Moshe (Mosey)
- Finkelstein, Haim
- Finkelstein, Rachel
- Finkelstein, Shoshana
- Fischer, Carol
- Fischer, Eva
- Fisher, Eyal
- Fisher, Gilit
- Fisher, Kenneth
- Fisher, Mati
- Fishman, Joel
- Fishzon, Moshe
- Fiszman, Marselo
- Flantz, Nitza
- Flash, Shalom
- Flatau, Arie (Leo)
- Fleisher, Miri
- Fleishman, Haim
- Fleishman, Moshe
- Flit, Pesach
- Folberg, Neil (Noah)
- Fonar Cocos, Inga
- Forrester, Hedo
- Foulds, George
- Fouturian, Leon
- Fox, Howard
- Franco, Meir
- Franco, Victor
- Frank, Basil
- Frank, Dina
- Frank, Gad
- Frank, Haim
- Frank, Herz
- Frank, Yael
- Frankel, Alona
- Frankel, Dudu (1)
- Frankel, Ruth
- Frankenburg, Charles
- Franklin, Jonathan
- Franks, Tamari
- Freed, Daphna
- Freedman, Eric
- Freiberger Csato, Eva
- Freiman, Avraham Mordechai
- Freiman, Gad
- Freiman, Gad (1)
- Freiman, Yehoshua
- Frenkel Eshet, Miri
- Frenkel, Itzhak
- Frenkel, Josepha
- Frenkel, Nora
- Freund, Dvora
- Freund, Tirza
- Fried, Eitan
- Fried, Esther
- Fried, Selina
- Friedberg, Albert
- Friedberg, Alona
- Friedlaender, Henri
- Friedland, Maud
- Friedlander, Bernhard
- Friedlander, Eyal
- Friedlander, Hagit
- Friedman, Ayana
- Friedman, David
- Friedman, Gil
- Friedman, Jonah
- Friedman, Josh
- Friedman, Michael
- Friedman, Mira
- Friedman, Zilla
- Friedmann, Max
- Frim, Inbar
- Frolich, Asher
- Fromovitz, Rachel
- Front, Yehoshua
- Frostig, Victor
- Fruman, Moshe
- Frumer, David
- Frumgartz, Jacob
- Frumin, Moshe
- Frydlender, Barry
- Fuchs Eidinger, Sidonia (Sidi)
- Fuchs, Colette
- Furman, Esther
- Fürst, Edmund
- Furst, Jullian
- Fuss, Daniel
- Fux, Maryon
- Fux, Paul

Alphabetical list of artists
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZMiri Fleisher

Miri Fleisher, Israeli, born 1947.
Miri Fleischer was born in Haifa in 1947. Her father, Hans Uri Abraham, immigrated to Eretz Israel from Germany as part of Youth Aliyah and worked in the Kedar ceramic factory in the city. The factory featured a display of sculptures designed by Israeli artists. He then worked as a police officer. Her mother, Naomi, a daughter of a Hungarian immigrant family, helped support her livelihood by lacquering furniture.
In her youth, she studied at the Hebrew Reali School in Haifa with the help of the money her father money when he finished his studies. In the first half of the 1970s, she studied pottery and ceramic design in Bezalel and began sculpting. In 2000, following the death of her parents, a fruitful period began in her work. In her works from that time, the disintegration and rebuilding motifs stand out, accompanied by a mix of political, biographical and poetic aspects. In her work “Jaffa” (2012), for example, Fleischer created three buildings that connect Palestinian ceramic fragments and Israeli-European porcelain, bought from shops in Jaffa and designed according to architectural images. This work was purchased and displayed in the Knesset Ceramic Art Collection.
Her works of the second decade of the 21st century show a return to traditional pottery. These intimate works, characterized by a combination of traditional work with the potter’s wheel and expressive sculptural processes, are influenced by the design of Japanese tea ceremony cups. The tools, which burn at high temperature (1200 ° C), make non-traditional use of glazing (glaze) to explore the limits of the material, its usability and its image as an art object.
She lives and works in Ramat Hasharon.
Education
1969-1971 The Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Art History and Hebrew Literature,
1971-1974 , Bezalel Academy of Art & Design, Jerusalem, Ceramic Design, BFA Graduated with distinction
1988-1990 Painting with Jan Rauchwarger
Awards And Prizes
1978 Scholarship for Editing Catalogue Haifa Culture Foundation