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Last 7 Days Catalog Additions

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  • Hebrew  (9)
  • 2015-2019  (9)
  • Ausstellung  (9)
  • Jews History
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  • 1
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 141 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2015
    Keywords: Künstler ; Ausstellung
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  • 2
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 37 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2015
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue = Katalog 632
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe [Moritz Spitzer ; Franziska Baruch ; Henri Friedöaender ; edited by Ada Wardi ; [research and exhibition in collaboration with Goethe-Institut, The German Literature Archive, Marbach, Germany] New types - Three pioneers of Hebrew graphic design
    Keywords: Schriftkunst ; Typografie ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Moshe Spitzer, Franzisca Baruch, and Henri Friedlaender studied and worked in pre-World War II Germany before immigrating to Israel, where they continued to be active for decades. Their works include the emblem of the City of Jerusalem, the Hadassah typeface, and books published by Tarshish. The exhibition explores the work processes of each one of these groundbreaking designers and presents a selection of their key works. Organized in collaboration with the German Literature Archive, Marbach, and with the support of the Goethe Institute. Research assistance granted by the Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Research Center for German-Jewish Literature and Cultural History at the Hebrew University
    Abstract: Typografische und buchgestalterische Arbeiten von Moshe Spitzer, Franzisca Baruch und Henri Friedlaender In einer Design- und Typografie-Ausstellung zeigt das Israel-Museum in Jerusalem Arbeiten von Franzisca Baruch, Henri Friedlaender und Moshe Spitzer, drei jüdischen Grafikdesignern und Typografen, die ihre Ausbildung in Deutschland erhielten und dort während der 1920er und 1930er erfolgreich arbeiteten. Nach ihrer Emigration aus dem nationalsozialistischen Deutschland setzten sie ihre Arbeit unter völlig anderen Bedingungen in einem neuen Umfeld fort und spielten eine entscheidende Rolle für die Schaffung und Ausdifferenzierung moderner hebräischer Schriften und Drucktypen sowie für die Gestaltung von Büchern und Emblemen im Palästina der Mandatszeit und später in Israel. Die Ausstellung befragt die kulturellen und ästhetischen europäischen Traditionen, die in den Arbeiten von Baruch, Friedlaender und Spitzer sichtbar werden, und zeigt die Entwicklung ihres Schaffens in Israel, wo sie die Formensprache des jungen Staates entscheidend prägten. In Zusammenarbeit mit dem Deutschen Literaturarchiv Marbach und dem Franz Rosenzweig Minerva Forschungszentrum der Hebräischen Universität Jerusalem. Gefördert vom Goethe-Institut.
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  • 3
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 180 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Illustrationen, Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2016
    Series Statement: [Tel Aviv Museum of Art] Catalogue = Katalog / Muze'on Tel Aviv la-Omanut 21/2016
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: Kunst ; Fotografie ; Ausstellung ; Afrofuturismus ; Subsaharisches Afrika
    Abstract: This large-scale group exhibition presents art being made today in, or about, Africa, from an Afro-futurist perspective that challenges traditional divisions: fantasy, imagination and cosmology, usually associated with past mythology, are incarnated into science fiction and futurist representation. The various narratives span between colonialism and its ramifications to a re-examination of the African body, landscape and culture—through utterances that shatter the usual distinction between truth and fiction, between myth and science, between technology and spirituality.
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  • 4
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 221 Seiten, [1] Blatt , Ill.
    Year of publication: 2015
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue = Katalog 630
    Series Statement: Israel Museum Catalogue
    Keywords: Bildpostkarte ; Grußkarte ; Rosch ha-Schanah ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: A selection of Jewish New Year cards created and circulated in 20th-century Europe, America, and Israel. With imagery relating to different historical events, these cards tell the dramatic story of the Jewish people throughout the century. The exhibition also displays illustrated New Year’s greetings from the late 19th century which preceded the cards, as well as Shanah Tovah posters designed in recent years by Israeli graphic artist David Tartakover as a response to political events and social issues affecting the country, which create a fascinating dialogue with the traditional imagery. All of the cards illustrated in the catalogue belong to the Israel Museum and most come from the Hayim Stayer Collection, unless otherwise indicated. The Stayer Collection was acquired for the Museum by Alberto Deller and Frida Klein-Deller of Quito, Ecuador, in memory of their son Pierre Philippe Deller Klein, and in honor of their grandchildren: Alexis and Adriel, Samantha, Harrison and James, and Aaron and Natalie.
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  • 5
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 283 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2016
    Keywords: Künstlerin ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Ofra Zimbalista (1939–2014) was a unique presence on the Israeli art scene. She did not measure her success solely by the number of museum exhibitions she participated in, but rather by the placement of her sculptures in public spaces. Her works speak above all to the public at large rather than to art connoisseurs, and the public listened and related to them with love. There were also museum exhibitions, yet the sculptures impressed upon collective memory are those placed in the public sphere, in a range of local and international sites. Zimbalista's "troupe" numbers some 50 actors. The members of this troupe are all sculptures – women, men, and children of all ages. Some of them appear in many of the artist's performances, while others participate in only a few. The stage sets vary: closed spaces, old castles, shopping malls, playgrounds. Beyond the actual process of creating the sculptures, Zimbalista's greatness lies in their positioning on these changing stages to create choreographies in space. Her spatial thinking and the precise planning of each figure's position are consistent and unique to her works – both to her permanent installations and to her temporary displays. Zimbalista's highly perfected talent in creating installation was also given expression in the positioning of the sculptures in her studio in Ashdod, which is reconstructed in the current exhibition at the Open Museum in Tefen. This is how the orphaned sculptures remained in the studio in Ashdod following the artist's death. Zimbalista's sculptural installation Walking was positioned on a rocky expanse at the heart of the Tefen Industrial Park when the Open Museum was inaugurated in 1987, and has been accompanying us ever since. "These figures will continue to walk across the rocky terrain even after we are gone," Zimbalista said in 2006, when we reinstalled the bronze casts of the figures. And she was right. The figures that make up Walking continue to accompany us today. Ruthi Ofek Exhibition Curator
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  • 6
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 73 Seiten, [1] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2019
    Series Statement: Catalogue 126
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: No! Art ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: “Welcome to this exhibition. If your eyes and mind serve you well, you will see something new. When viewing this show, please avoid applying aesthetic labels; do not call us realists, neo-dadaists, surrealists. These labels are neither true nor important in today’s context.” Boris Lurie, 1961 This exhibition at the Janco-Dada Museum is dedicated to the artists from the NO!art group, whom we consider close in spirit and motivation to Dada artists. Three years after Boris Lurie’s solo exhibition at the museum, the current exhibition displays a selection of works by the NO!art group. Most of the displayed works are collages and assemblages, while some are based on readymade. All these techniques are also identified with the work of Dada artists. Like the Dadaists, who sought to oppose bourgeois society and its art, the artists in the NO!art group emerged in New York in the late 1950s and early 1960s in protest against art and society. The works displayed in the exhibition stretch the boundaries of the term “Beaux Artes” by arousing feelings of rejection and disgust: burned dolls, shit sculptures, assemblages made from discarded objects and garbage from the world of consumerism and abundance. The works portray violence, sex and waste and were created out of a desire to protest the ills of human society. Indeed, at the beginning of the second half of the twentieth century when these artists were active, they worked at the margins of the art world and produced these works, fully aware they would have no commercial value and would not adorn the bourgeois homes of contemporary art collectors. The exhibition includes works by sixteen artists: Boris Lurie’s assemblages made of hair and paint, and reliefs of newspapers and ashes. Sam Goodman’s readymade sculptures are based on garbage and broken objects collected in the street. The large collages by Stanley Fisher center on distorted portraits. The plaster sculptures of Rocco Armento are deliberately damaged. Isser Aronovici’s oil paintings focus on distorted figures. Wolf Vostell’s collages and assemblages combine photographs and objects. John Fischer produced a series of unappetizing sculptures made from bread. The photograph by Yayoi Kusama is part of an installation in which the artist covered furniture with growths that resemble male sexual organs. Dorothy Gillespie produced coffins for animals, Sam Goodman and Boris Lurie’s works are collections of lumps of shit. Jean-Jacques Lebel’s assemblage is based on a castrated body. Stella Waitzkin used polyester molds in the shape of books and other objects that she gathered together in the form of fluid “libraries”. The collection of experimental and innovative films by Aldo Tambellini done directly on film, with no camera, studies motion, electricity, light and black. The painting by Allan D’arcangelo depicts a stormy, female sexual image. Erró created a photographic collage. The distorted clay parts forming the shape of a cross by Susan Long (Harriet Wood) resemble female genital forms or shells. Finally, Herb Brown’s contribution is a disturbing painting of a boy’s face on an advertising poster. Boris Lurie words quoted here above, attempt to warn the visitors that they are about to view works that may make them uncomfortable. Art critic Galia Yahav noted that for the NO!art group, unlike the other artists from that period such as Rauschenberg for example, the daring lyrical beauty of urban ugliness, the material fragility and the poetics of garbage are also accompanied by critical commitment and sharp anti-war and anti-consumerism protest. These artists made use of the markings of consumer culture to express their exaggerated and aggressive rage toward the system, and their firm objections to everything associated with the obsequious seductiveness and greed of Andy Warhol and his cronies and with the confirmation of American values.
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  • 7
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 130 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2018
    Series Statement: [Tel Aviv Museum of Art] Catalogue = Katalog / Muze'on Tel Aviv la-Omanut 4/2018
    Series Statement: Catalogue
    Keywords: Künstler ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: Avraham Ofek's complex, rich and enigmatic oeuvre is presented from a retrospective view that emphasizes facets of his interdisciplinary collaborations and installation works. Ofek’s ongoing dialog with Joseph Beuys' renowned 1974 installation I Like America and America Likes Me is featured as a focus that charges internal layers and contexts along his way.
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  • 8
    ISBN: 9789655724172
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 179 Seiten, [2] Blatt, 136 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2017
    Keywords: mamzer ; Biennale ; Kunstausstellung ; Ausstellung ; Jerusalem
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  • 9
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 62 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2019
    Keywords: Künstlerin ; Künstler ; Ausstellung
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