Rotem Balva
Adina Bar-On
Eliasaf Kowner
Nira Pereg
Ilana Salama-Ortar
Effi Weiss
Amir Borenstein
Ariel Yannay
Stephanie Benzaquen
A time for transition. Tel Aviv video. What will occur, here... in the coming minute or in an improbable future. This 'Hereafter' could be as well the silence of a moment, the moment, which precedes the event. A tension. An in-between whose image would not reveal anything to the eye of the one who ignores, without sign, without clue... A passage. A transition.
A TIME FOR TRANSITION. Tel Aviv video
Artists: Rotem Balva, Adina Bar-On, Eliasaf Kowner, Nira Pereg, Ilana
Salama-Ortar, Effi Weiss & Amir Borenstein, Ariel Yannay
Curator: Stephanie Benzaquen
"Hereafter": what will occur, here... in the coming minute or in an improbable
future. This "Hereafter" could be as well the silence of a moment, the moment,
which precedes the event. A tension. An in-between whose image would not reveal
anything to the eye of the one who ignores, without sign, without clue... A
passage. A transition.
Israel: an area of conflicts. On its boundaries since its establishment in 1948.
And, since almost three years, a country stuck within the violent and endless
conflict with the Palestinians. Inside its frontiers too because of its social
complexity. Israel is built on the immigration - each flow having brought its
own claims and pains, and its history. The cultural plurality displays within
dichotomies and tensions. At last, a country which is continuously seeking for
its identity, oscillating between the exile inheritance and the territorial
pragmatism. A country torn between the protection of the elements that built its
specificity and the desire for normalization, or the integration within a larger
whole: difficult adjustment of the particularism and the globalization.
The nostalgic temptation is strong in the Israeli contemporary art. Nostalgia
for better days, when the conflict was not so present in the daily life.
Nostalgia deeply rooted within a particular historical vision, related to things
that don't exist anymore and that will never come back, whatever they are, the
pre-war Jewish world, Israel in the effervescence of its construction, the myth
of solidarity and of the Zionist home. And nostalgia for an artistic practice
that did not have, by that time, to untangle the muddled skein of more and more
complicated political positions: then, the commitment was clear.
Between this intangible past, somewhat inexistent and imaginary, and the
overshadowed future, as carrying too many questions and fears, what is left is
the present: such a hard present which is the mark of a country locked up in its
traumatisms and hardly able to deal with them. Somehow, a present without actual
mediation.
The artists of the exhibition share the willingness to inscribe their creativity
within new perspectives, as a necessary step of the mediation. Each one copes
with the task to decipher differently the reality, to imagine other visibilities
for the present and to bring them to awareness and larger interpretations. It is
the complicated representation of a country going through continuous changes.
By setting in motion the process of questioning, and not through the call to a
massive reaction, the presented works aim at reflecting the "transitory"
component as an essential element of the Israeli reality and thinking the
possibilities of transition. Like an attempt at drawing right now the topography
of a possible future without forgetting that this future, heavy of contradictory
schemes, remains in the hands of those who act within the present. A time of
wait, beforehand...
In the video works by Adina Bar-On, "View" and "Motherland", the body, the
movement and the word redraw the landscape, endowing it with new meanings. The
artist rebuilds the relation to the territory, the earth as well as to the
memory and the history impregnating the Israeli landscape and turns them into
vectors of universal feelings and understandings. The reconfiguration of the
environment goes too through the articulation of the context with other
situations and through the creation of parallels in time and space. The
documentary by Ilana Salama-Ortar, "The Camp of the Jews", through the personal
witnesses about the transit camp of the Grand Arénas in Marseille (France) -
where the artist stayed when she was a child - opens to connections to multiple
stories of exile, displacement, loss and tearing and to the wider reflection
regarding the structure of the camp, whatever it is, wherever it is, whenever it
is.
The exhibited works give neither solution nor answer: they present a situation
in its unfinished and potential aspects. There is a certain dialogue between the
works by Nira Pereg, "Guest", and Ariel Yannay, "Surroundings", who both show
building sites, zones of transformation. For Pereg, the human element, the
artist herself, is a determining presence. Feelings and fears of the female
character combine with the chaotic and dubious urban landscape, which is
actually one of the central streets of Tel Aviv. It creates the oscillating
perception of the inside/outside relationship. Text and voice of Louise
Bourgeois intensify this oscillating subjective perception and move away from
the documentation. For Yannay, the locations, the surroundings, are empty:
building areas, of Tel Aviv and Jaffa, whose ephemeral aspect has been
definitely fixed. The immobilized space and time reflect a context, which is
first the daily one facing the artist, then the paradoxical view of the
permanence developed within the temporary. The building sites are the
translation of the paradigm of the transitory.
The contradictory juxtaposition of permanence and temporary, or the continuous
passage, gets another translation with the work by Effi Weiss and Amir
Borenstein. "Vil-Nor" is the fictionalized version of the mythic story of the
"Genius of Vilnius" (the "Gaon of Vilna"). In this subtly ironic work on the
endless exile, which is also a never began exile, resound the personal
perception of two Israeli artists living abroad since a few years as well as the
essential dimension of the movement in the Israeli culture.
Eliasaf Kowner also uses the stories of others - the passer-by, the accidental
encounter - to depict the reality, from a totally different point of view. He
projects his own questioning towards and through the words and attitudes of the
people which he meets and films during his walks in Tel Aviv. Sensitive gaze
posed on two women sitting in a bar, "In the Centre" creates empathy and moments
of identification.
Rotem Balva acts through minimal displacement and shifting in order to reach
areas where codes and boundaries get confused. The intermediary and filtering
space, where the rules of the game fade away and the interpretations collide,
brings, through a controlled aesthetic process, her daily intimate feelings
towards the public view. "Op-Allah" invites the viewer to enter the private
experience built as an installation for communication.
The lecture on Israeli contemporary art will be held by Stephanie Benzaquen:
21st May, Wednesday at 4pm.
The opening of the exhibition: 21st May, Wednesday at 6pm.
The performance dedicated to the opening will be played by Adina Bar-On: the
same day at 6.30 pm
Contemporary Art Centre
Vokieciu 2, 2001 Vilnius, Lithuania
Tel: +370 5 2121954, Fax: +370 5 2623954