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  • 2010-2014  (3)
  • Jerusalem  (3)
  • Kunst  (3)
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  • 1
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Heft , Illustrationen
    Additional Material: 1 Faltblatt
    Year of publication: 2013
    Keywords: Israel ; Kunst
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  • 2
    Language: English
    Pages: 119 Seiten, [3] Blatt , Illustrationen
    Year of publication: 2013
    Keywords: Kunst ; Videokunst ; Fotografie ; Installation ; Kunstausstellung ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: ״If you are lonely when you are alone, you are in bad company״ Jean Paul Sartre Loneliness is a major contemporary phenomenon, gaining more and more impact on people’s lives. The exacting urban environment, in the face of social and technological changes, never leaves the individual in peace – it forever urges him, stimulates his nerves and attacks his senses in an endless sequence of fleeting perceptions and random impressions. Many amongst us seek simulations of life that seem more exciting than life itself. We fear a reality which is not mediated by computers. Thousands of text messages sent daily by people all over the world, who spend endless hours in social networks, have created a new reality of social alienation, unparalleled in its dimensions compared to past generations. Thus we become victims of the illusion of virtual friendships on the web, where we collect thousands of friends whom we imagine to be human relationships that only lead us to further loneliness. The more technology advances, the more our mental lives retreat. Loneliness and solitude are seemingly similar but are in fact very different scenarios, in which the individual is alone. Loneliness is a state of segregation of the individual, while solitude is a voluntary state in which the individual is independent and can appreciate the space surrounding him, and where perhaps, he might find the best possible company. In his book "Between Man and Man" Martin Buber writes: “We have seen how in the history of the human spirit man again and again becomes solitary… that is, he seeks a divine form of being with which, solitary as he is, he can communicate ;he stretches his hands out beyond the world to meet this form. But we have also seen that there is a way leading from one edge of solitude to the next, that is, that each solitude is colder and stricter than the preceding, and salvation from it more difficult. But finally man reached a condition where he can no longer stretch his hands out from his solitude to meet a divine form. That is at the basis of Nietzsche’s saying, ‘God is dead’. Apparently, nothing more remains now to the solitary man but to seek an intimate communication with himself.” Raphie Etgar, Curator
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  • 3
    Language: Hebrew
    Pages: 171, 117 Seiten
    Year of publication: 2010
    Keywords: Israel ; Kunst ; Judentum ; Kunstausstellung ; Kunstpreis ; Adi Prize for Jewish Expression in Art and Design ; Ausstellung
    Abstract: The exhibition brings together the eighteen works selected as finalists for “The Adi Prize for Jewish Expression in Art and Design,” a biennial international competition in the visual arts on a theme related to Jewish thought and tradition, organized by The Adi Foundation. The Foundation, established in 2000 in memory of Adi Dermer, née Blumberg, fosters the connection between art and the spiritual values that are at the heart of Judaism. The current competition theme of “Rupture and Repair” was addressed by artists in a variety of media, including painting, textile, installation, video, jewelry, sculpture, photography, drawing, and performance. These works explore “Rupture and Repair” in Jewish history, homiletics, mysticism, and prayer, as well as in individual biographies, embracing the personal experiences of immigration, family relationships, exile, alienation, loss, and suffering. A number of artists created new objects with which to perform existing Jewish rituals of repentance, mourning, and renewal; others reinvented traditional objects and techniques. Ranging from particularistic Jewish narratives of the Shoah and kibbutz life to universal experiences of coping with crises of faith, dislocation, illness, grief, and death, these eighteen works represent creative investigations of form and content as artists confront rupture and seek repair. Participating Artists: Dov Abramson, Raida Adon, Shai Azoulay, Ofri Cnaani, Benny Elbaz, Ofir Galili, Hadassa Goldvicht, Or Halbrecht, Amram Jacoby, Tobi Kahn, Ruth Kestenbaum Ben-Dov, Sharone Lifschitz, Peter Jacob Maltz, Katya Oicherman, Orit Raff, Zelig Segal, Arik Weiss, Yitzchak Woolf, Inbal Yomtovian, and Maya Zack. The winner of the Adi Prize for Jewish Expression in Art and Design will be announced on May 16, 2010. May 8 – July 10, 2010 in the Artists’ House, Jerusalem
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