feed icon rss

Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 189 Seiten, [2] Blatt , Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2014
    Series Statement: KW Pocket 3
    Series Statement: KW Pocket
    Keywords: Fotografie ; Fotografin
    Abstract: Im Frühjahr 2013 hat das Shpilman Institut für Fotografie (Tel Aviv) in Kooperation mit den KW Institute for Contemporary Art und der Schir Foundation (Berlin) erstmalig ein Aufenthaltsstipendium für Fotografie vergeben. Ilit Azoulay (*1972, Israel) bezog im Juni 2013 ein Studio in den KW und nutzte in den fünf Monaten ihres Aufenthalts die Möglichkeit, ihr Interesse an der Archäologie der Städte zu vertiefen. In Deutschland sammelte und fotografierte sie Objekte und architektonische Fragmente in Berlin, Weimar, Kulmain, Regensburg, Dessau, Bamberg, Brandenburg, Xanten, Potsdam und Halle sowie in dem Gebäudekomplex der KW selbst. In einigen Fällen wählte Azoulay unterschiedlichste denkmalgeschütze Orte wie auch Gebäude, die Stein für Stein, gemäß den denkmalpflegerischen Maßgaben, rekonstruiert wurden. Jedes der 93 gesammelten Objekte wurde mit einer Technik, ähnlich der des Scannens, fotografiert. Diese Technik ist charakteristisch für die Arbeitsweise der Künstlerin und ermöglicht ihr die Nebeneinanderstellung verschiedener Betrachtungspunkte zu einem digital komponierten Bild. Nach ihrem Aufenthalt in Berlin begann Azoulay mit der Sammlung diverser Informationen, die mit der Herkunft jedes einzelnen Objektes in Verbindung stehen. Diese akribische Erfassung von Informationen wurde zentral für das Projekt und beinhaltet Korrespondenzen mit Klöstern, BewohnerInnen von besetzten Häusern, PräparationsexpertInnen, PflanzenforscherInnen, GebäudekonstrukteurInnen und AnwältInnen. Hinzu kommt eine Sammlung von Geräuschen, die im Bezug zu den Objekten aufgezeichnet wurden. Für ihre Ausstellung in den KW präsentiert Azoulay ihre fotografierten Objekte in einer ortsspezifischen Installation. Die gesammelten Objekte werden um einen Audioguide erweitert, der den Betrachter in die historischen, persönlichen und eigentümlichen Details des Forschungsprozesses der Künstlerin einweiht und dazu einlädt, die Textualität eines jeden Objektes zu entdecken.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    Language: German
    Pages: 195 Seiten , Illustrationen
    Additional Material: The fall and fall of Mr. Button. An opera by Nir Shauloff (20, 8 Seiten)
    Year of publication: 2019
    Abstract: A material and historical study of the controversial Transfer Agreement (1933-1939), which enabled the extraction of Jewish wealth from Nazi Germany to Palestine through the import of German goods. The goods included construction materials used in the international style buildings throughout the White City in the 1930s. The exhibition will focus on and grow out of the Liebling House (29 Idelson St), home of the White City Center, and where some of those construction materials were found. Artists: Ilit Azoulay, Lou Moriah, Nir Shauloff (The Liebling Project), Jonathan Touitou Scientific Advisors: Joachim Nicolas Trezib & Ines Sonder Curator: Hila Cohen-Schneiderman (The Liebling Project) Accompanying the research: Sharon Golan-Yaron, content manager of the White City Center The exhibition is supported by the Inspire Foundation, Artis, and Bauhaus Today Fund. The Liebling Project is the Residency Program of the White City Center; artistic director: Hila Cohen-Schneiderman.
    Abstract: The houses in the “White City” in Tel Aviv (Israel), a UNESCO World Heritage site since 2003, were partly erected of building materials from Germany. The Haavara Agreement, a contract between Zionists in Palestine and National Socialists in Germany, played an important role for this. The exhibition The Transfer Agreement deals with this agreement from an artistic, architectural and political perspective. It will be shown during the Triennale of Modernism at the Bauhaus Dessau. The controversial agreement between the Jewish Agency, the Zionist Association for Germany and Nazi Germany was valid from 1933 to 1938. It should be an incentive for German Jews to emigrate, by enabling them to transfer part of their property to Palestine. They paid in the property at one of the transfer banks in Germany. Local importers used this money to buy goods in Germany, e.g. building materials, and sold them in Palestine. When the emigrants arrived in Palestine, they got their money back, after the deduction of the cost. More than 50,000 German Jews emigrated under the Haavara Agreement. Estimated 150 million Reichsmarks are assumed to have been transferred. A real building boom began, based on this mass of construction material, coining the “White City” Tel Aviv – from cement to tiles. For the exhibition Transfer Conversion in the Bauhaus Building, some of the building materials from Tel Aviv return to Germany. The Transfer Agreement is a joint project of the Bauhaus Dessau Foundation and The White City Center. The exhibition is simultaneously shown in Tel Aviv. The focus of the team around the artists Ilit Azoulay, Lou Moriah, Nir Shauloff and Jonathan Touitou, the curator Hila Cohen-Schneiderman and the monument conservationist Sharon Golan-Yaron is on the concept of the “Societies on the Move”: the move of people, materials and cultures as central element of modern architecture and its influence on urban development. The project will investigate historical and contemporary relations and raise the question for the impact of migration and mobility on individuals, cities and culture while they reshape their identities
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    ISBN: 9783954764778 , 3954764776
    Language: Arabic
    Pages: 240 Seiten , Illustrationen , 29.7 cm x 23 cm
    Edition: 1. Auflage
    Year of publication: 2022
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    Article
    Article
    In:  Kunstforum international : [die aktuelle Zeitschrift für alle Bereiche der bildenden Kunst] 282 (2022) : 59. Biennale Venedig : the milk of dreams, Seite 294 - 295
    Language: German
    Pages: Fotografien
    Year of publication: 2022
    Titel der Quelle: Kunstforum international : [die aktuelle Zeitschrift für alle Bereiche der bildenden Kunst]
    Publ. der Quelle: Ruppichteroth
    Angaben zur Quelle: 282 (2022) : 59. Biennale Venedig : the milk of dreams, Seite 294 - 295
    Note: Länderpavillion Israel
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Book
    Book
    Berlin : Sternberg Press
    ISBN: 9783956791093
    Language: English
    Pages: 163, XXIX Seiten , Fotografien , 32 cm
    Year of publication: 2014
    Keywords: Fotografin
    Abstract: "Finally Without End" features Ilit Azoulay’s meticulously composed photographs, and includes work from the series “Implicit Manifestations,” created during a six-month residency at the KW Institute for Contemporary Art in Berlin. Concerned with the unacknowledged scraps and remains of the everyday—from architectural debris to spools of thread—her photographs capture the ambiguity of objects detached from their original purpose. Presented in new symmetrical configurations, her images speak to the memory-work attributed to things and our unreliable cataloguing of knowledge through them. In addition to her photographs, this publication offers a variety of perspectives on Azoulay’s practice. Sarit Shapira describes the artist’s 2008 series “Unknown Aspects” as an elevation of cultural debris to the level of representation, while Michal Ben-Naftali offers a psychoanalytic reading of Azoulay’s uncanny images. Shalom Shpilman explores the viewer’s participation in the artist’s visual realm of significance. Curators Aya Lurie (Herzliya Museum of Contemporary Art, Israel) and Gabriele Horn (KW Berlin) meditate on two concurrent exhibitions of some of the work featured in this book. Azoulay’s photographs, as one essay describes, are events-in-progress—forever unfolding and forestalling conclusion.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...