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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • Hebrew  (4)
  • 2020-2024  (4)
  • Ausstellung  (4)
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  • 1
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 171 Seiten, [1] Blatt , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2020
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue = Katalog 693
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue
    Keywords: Stuhl ; Installation ; Chassidim ; Isolation ; Fotografie ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Hitbodedut – self-secluded prayer and introspection – is practiced by Bratslav Hasidim in forests throughout Israel. These Hasidim use the salvaged parts of old chairs to create “new” chairs for this very purpose. Rabbi Nahman of Bratslav (1772-1810) believed a regular practice of hitbodedut was perhaps the most important element in one’s relationship with God. In this state the Hasid addresses God directly, sharing his most personal prayers and thoughts without the mediation of a prayer book or synagogue, as he strives to achieve spiritual affirmation and restoration. Photographs of some of these chairs documented by industrial designer and exhibition co-curator Eran Lederman are displayed alongside chairs created by contemporary designers and accompanied by quotes attributed to Rabbi Nahman. This encounter of objects from different worlds invites exploration of the meaning hidden inside an object, delving into cross-cultural concepts of nature and civilization, self-seclusion and repair.
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  • 2
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 86, LXXXII Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2023
    Series Statement: [Tel Aviv Museum of Art] Catalogue = Katalog / Muze'on Tel Aviv la-Omanut 8/2023
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: Jom-Kippur-Krieg ; Film ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: The sirens cutting through the silence of Yom Kippur on the early afternoon of 6 October 1973 caught Amos Gitai, who had only recently completed his army service, on the cusp of his second year of architecture studies at the Technion. Gitai picked up his friend from the IDF Egoz Unit and drove north to the Golan Heights to look for the war. Unable to find their unit, they joined an airborne rescue team – a pilot, co-pilot, physician, and four members. For five consecutive days, they flew to evacuate wounded soldiers from the Golan battlefields. Back and forth, they carried the stretcher to the helicopter and the hospital. On the sixth day of the war, 11 October (Gitai’s 23rd birthday), they were sent to rescue a pilot whose airplane had been hit and he had ejected into Syrian territory. During that flight, a Syrian missile hit the helicopter. The co-pilot, Captain Gadi Klein, was killed instantly, and the pilot managed to land the helicopter on Israeli ground. Gitai, also injured, was hospitalized with the rest of the team. After several days he slipped out of the hospital and began his afterlife. In the conventional sense, the Yom Kippur War ended in victory. However, the surprise attack's impact and the Israeli leadership's failures marked this war in Israeli consciousness as a traumatic event, after which nothing would ever be the same. The war was a defining event in Gitai’s life – it changed his path and led him to filmmaking. In Gitai’s oeuvre – internationally acclaimed thanks to a copious filmography that includes many dozens of documentaries, feature, and experimental films – the Yom Kippur War returns in telling moments, both personal and political. The exhibition presents the short Super-8 films Gitai made during the war; the intense pastel drawings he created after it as real-time witness accounts of sorts; segments from the documentary film Kippur: War Memories (1994); and the opening shot of the feature film Kippur (2000). All these foreshadow the new video installation, Kippur, War Requiem, created especially for the exhibition. These returns to Kippur – differing in length, genre, and focus – are where Gitai explored the elusiveness of memory and the impact the war had on those who participated in it in his quest to convey a sharp image of war as chaos. The 50th anniversary of the Yom Kippur War is occurring in one of the most tempestuous years in the country’s history. The legislation pushed by the government is threatening to turn Israel into a hollow democracy and is brutally polarizing Israeli society. Among the hundreds of thousands of Israelis taking to the streets to fight for the country’s character, the Yom Kippur Veterans group stands out – as those who paid the price of that war with their bodies and souls and the loss of their friends. They are a community of memory fighting for the memory of the war and its meaning.
    Note: Ausstellung, 11.9.2023 - 13.1.2024, Sam and Ayala Zacks Pavillion, Paulson Family Foundation Building
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  • 3
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 90 Seiten, [3] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2020
    Series Statement: Catalogue 2020/2
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: Künstler ; Ausstellung
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  • 4
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 191 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2021
    Series Statement: [Tel Aviv Museum of Art] Catalogue = Katalog / Muze'on Tel Aviv la-Omanut 2/2021
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: Künstler ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Recipient of the Rappaport Prize for an Established Israeli Artist, 2019 The exhibition spans five decades of artistic practice, from 1973 to 2020, but it is centered on the verso paintings created by David Ginton in the past twenty years. These works push the linguistic preoccupation in Ginton's oeuvre to the limit, a process which has been rooted from the very outset in 1960s and 1970s European and American conceptual art. The engagement with language was already at the core of Ginton's work in the early 1970s. It was manifested, for example, in photographs documenting physical acts, illustrating Hebrew idioms, such as Burying One's Head in the Sand, Burning Oneself in Scalding Water, and Jumping into Stormy Waters. These works embodied the absurd violence sparked in the encounter between language and image — violence which was later enhanced in political contexts: In 1973, Ginton inquired how to make Art in a Time of War; he subsequently exhibited bullet-pierced art books and photographs of buildings at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem; and in the 1990s he inserted a bullet in a series of paintings depicting the Israeli flag, thereby indicating the complexity of making art in light of the Israeli political reality following the 1967 war. Two key works were made before Ginton's return to Israel from a sojourn abroad, with the outbreak of the 1973 (Yom Kippur) war: one features him kneeling before the door of Joseph Beuys's Düsseldorf house (In Front of Beuys’s House), and the other—standing in the shadow of a replica of Michelangelo's sculpture David in Florence (David and I). These photographic works preceded another recurrent avenue, touching on art-making in the periphery, which continued in the early 1990s with the flag works, which a "local adaptation" of seminal modernist works by Jasper Johns, Lucio Fontana, and others, using quotes and appropriation. This practice was further elaborated in the 2000s with ironic titles, such as The English Painter, given to a group of paintings that quote and distort texts from the back covers of books. Since 1994, the key motif in Ginton's oeuvre has been the "back" of the painting, initially in photographs of the reverse side of paintings from the collection of Tel Aviv Museum of Art, and later, in the 2000s, in verso paintings alluding to the trompe l'oeil tradition in Western painting. These paintings depict the (alleged) backs of fictitious paintings, bearing the paintings' titles alongside texts—excerpts from theoretical essays and books about art, biblical verses, Midrashim, as well as invented texts. In presenting the text appearing on what seems to be the back side of a painting, Ginton brings the literal-conceptual aspect underlying his work to the fore. The painting's reversal is interpreted in these paintings in terms of revealment and concealment, questioning the work's elusive existence and its ability to reveal itself to the viewer, while concurrently hinting at theological aspects associated with seeing the face of God and with death. Through the title of the exhibition — "The Name of the Painting" — Ginton points out the unique status of the title in his verso paintings: "The name precedes the painting," he explains. "The paintings are spawned by their names. Once a name comes up that is worthy of a new painting, the painting has already been conceived to a large extent, and it only remains to realize it in paint: a painting depicting the back of a painting. A painting is born from words, as it were."
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