Jeff Jaffe was born in South Africa. His initial training in the arts started when he was very young, but began more formally in Haifa, Israel, when he left the Apartheid of South Africa at the age of 20. Under the guidance of the sculptor Dorothy Robbins, Jeff’s interest in sculpture was encouraged and his move to the United States to study art further was soon realized. He received his BA from the University of Haifa and Montclair State College, and his MFA in sculpture from the Cranbrook Academy of Art (with Michael Hall). He established shortly thereafter – and has maintained since then – a studio in New York City. With numerous experience in the art gallery world, Jeff founded Pop International Galleries in New York City. He has received numerous grants and awards, most noted among them, a grant from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. His work has been collected extensively in the United States, Canada, South Africa and Europe.
We all simply wander around the world in some odd form or another struggling with what we want to show our fellow humans. We all act as vessels needing to fill and be filled by each other – as conduits – craving contact and discourse with one another. Yet most often, we safely hide behind that gray iron mask which conveniently shields us from lies and truth and from light and darkness.
While our environs help define these fragile facades, whatever we may choose to hide or expose, most of us still quietly aspire from darkness to light, from ignorance to enlightenment and from discomfort to ease.
Though we may feel isolated at times, our most intimate and base functions are the ties that paradoxically and inextricably bind us together as humans. We share a universal commonness often overshadowed by opinion, class and politics.
Battered as we may be, lied to and manipulated as we so often are, the indomitable, spiritual, creative, ingenious human spirit still prevails. We sing, we make art, we dance, we work and we perpetuate our species. We endeavor to rise above the grayness. We struggle and we persevere. We come up against demons within and we battle those without. We clumsily clamor toward truth and we protest. But mostly, all we merely seek, is acceptance.