About Eden Herman-Rosenblum at « Judaica Now! »: Goblets and Kiddush Cups of the Bezalel School Exhibition at Rishon Le Zion Museum

About Eden Herman-Rosenblum at « Judaica Now! »:  Goblets and Kiddush Cups of the Bezalel School Exhibition at Rishon Le Zion Museum

One of the most prominent Contemporary Judaica designer and Jewish artist coupe-edenpiein the exhibition is Eden Herman-Rosenblum. She began her career in Bezalel Academy of Art, Silversmith Department, in 1990. After graduating in Silversmithing and Jewellery at Bezalel Academy of Art Jerusalem, She now brings her unique ideas to the field of Judaica, working from her design studio and workshop in Pardes-Hana Kurkar, Israel.

All Eden’s products are original handcrafted pieces, including Havdalah Set,  modern Menorot for Hannukah, Kiddush Cups, Marriage rings and many different mezuzah designs.

Each piece is beautifully boxed making it an ideal gift for Jewish weddings, Jewish holidays, Bar or Bat Mitzvahs, as well as for housewarming and hostess gift giving.

Eden’s fresh ideas contribute to a new wave of exciting Judaica design, shaking up the traditional Jewish objects and generating worldwide interest. Her work is exhibited in galleries and museums around the world.

Eden’s Inspiration for her Judaica designs.

Many of Eden’s Judaica designs are inspired by her love to irony of a fantastic design based on what is now history. Combining this with her Jewish upbringing and identity, Eden has produced many stunning pieces of modern Judaica.

Eden was thrilled when she was contacted by the curators: Dr. Shirat-Miriam Shamir and Mr. Ido Noy . At a request from Dr. for Jewish Art and a researcher at the Center for Jewish Art in Jerusalem, they proposed to take three of Eden’s Kidush Cups to their exhibition, « Judaica Now! »:  Goblets and Kiddush Cups of the Bezalel School Exhibition at Rishon Le-Zion Museum .

Dr Shirat-Miriam SHAMIR (Docteur en Arts et commissaire d’expositionand Mr. Ido Noy,

Iris Tutnauer at « Judaica Now! »: Goblets and Kiddush Cups of the Bezalel School

« Judaica Now! »:  Goblets and Kiddush Cups of the Bezalel School Exhibition at Rishon Le Zion Museum

The first prominent Contemporary Judaica designer and Jewish artist in the exhibition is Iris Tutnauer.
artists-planet-rula-magazine-iris-tutnauer

Iris Tutnauer was born, lives and works in Jerusalem. She graduated from the Bezalel Academy of Art, Silversmith Department, in 1990.

Iris’s unique work integrates contemporary design and exceptional craftsmanship to express traditional Jewish concepts and values.

Her Judaica pieces have been purchased by the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, the Jewish Museum in NY and the North Carolina Museum of Art, in addition to several private collections.

artists-planet-iris-tutnauer-rula-magazine-copieIn creating her Kiddush cup Iris Tutnauer finds her inspiration from a Kiddush cup with a lid from her grandfather’s home in Iraq.  Tutnauer excels in passing on the sense of nostalgia and grants a presence to her childhood memories together with her experiences as a grown woman at the present time.

Dr. Shirat-Miriam SHAMIR (Docteur en Arts et commissaire d’exposition) and Mr. Ido Noy,

 

Vernissage de l’exposition « Judaïca contemporaine » à Rishon Letzion

« Judaica contemporain, coupes et verres à vin de l’Ecole des beaux-arts de Bezalel »
(un article ARTISTS PLANET paru dans ASHDOD CAFE)

« Judaica contemporain : coupes  et verres à vin de l’Ecole des beaux-arts de Bezalel  » présente une collection de 48 coupes et verres de kiddouch  conçus par des artistes et des designers israéliens de premier ordre, parmi les plus reconnus en Israël et dans le monde.

Les artisartists-planet-ashdod-cafetes issus de la prestigieuse école d’art de Jérusalem expriment, dans  cette nouvelle collection de Judaïca, leur interprétation personnelle et contemporaine des objets de culte. On y trouve de nouvelles approches du monde juif et des objets rituels. Que ce soit d’un point de vue culturel, historique, social, matériel et technologique.

Des dizaines des coupes et verres à vin conçus et présentés par les artistes 48 ont été sélectionnés par les curateurs, ainsi que deux courts métrages qui retracent l’histoire de la  Judaïca de l’Ecole Bezalel.artists-planet-ashdod-cafe

La richesse des objets représentent de manière très précise les approches des différentes promotions de l’école du design
israélien, et les préférences des collectionneurs contemporains.

Si une partie des œuvres ont été conçues selon la halah’a et les règles de cacherout, et sont destinés à une utilisation dans des maisons juives, certaines ont été créées dans une démarche différente, conceptuelle et interrogative plus que religieuse.

artists-planet-ashdod-cafe-copieCommissaires de l’exposition : Dr Shirat Miriam SHAMIR et Ido NOY.

L’inauguration se tiendra au musée de Rishon LeZion (2 rue Ehad Ha’am)  le jeudi 29/09/2016 et l’exposition durera jusqu’au 28/03/2017.

Horaires d’ouverture du musée :Dimanche, mardi, mercredi et jeudi de 9 à 14hMardi : de 9h à 13h.

Prix d’entrée : 25 NISRenseignements : 03 95 98 862

Dr Shirat-Miriam SHAMIR (Docteur en Arts et commissaire d’exposition) – Paru dans www.ashdodcafe.com

 

Aarale BEN ARIE: là où l’est rencontre l’ouest (1)

Aarale Ben-Arie : là où l’Est rencontre l’Ouest (première partie)
(un article ARTISTS PLANET paru dans le magazine METEOR)

Aarale Ben-Arie appartient à ce cercle grandissant d’artistes qui explorent plutôt que ne concluent, qui préfèrent expérimenter plutôt que chercher à inscrire des idées arrêtées. Les œuvres présentées au public sont souvent pensées pour être des pièces éphémères, rendant compte du processus de fabrication artistique et d’emploi de matériaux, plutôt que rapportant les plaisirs d’une expérience esthétique.

Sculpteur et peintre israélien, Aarale (Aaron) Ben Arie est né en 1955 à Haïfa. Il vit aujourd’hui à Tzafririm, un moshav situé non loin de Jérusalem.

Autodidacte, il choisit d’étudier auprès d’artistes et d’artisans ; il apprend artists-planet-meteor-magazine-6-copie

notamment de potiers et de menuisiers de Gaza et d’Hébron. Il se met à sculpter le bois, il reconstitue des outils antiques et crée des ateliers de travail.

On peut dire de lui qu’il est un créateur d’expériences.

Tout au long de sa carrière, Aarale Ben-Arie a principalement créé des sculptures, à la fois miniatures et monumentales, pour des environnements ruraux et urbains, pour des espaces privés et publics en Israël et à l’étranger.

Ses œuvres se situent à la frontière entre illustrations naturali stes et silhouettes abstraites, bandes dessinées et hiéroglyphes, représentations en deux et trois dimensions.

L’exposition Là où l’Est rencontre l’Ouest (Where East Meets West), présentée en 2007 à la Galerie Heppaecher en Allemagne, a rassemblé trente sculptures en bois et en métal s’inspirant d’une expérience à la fois politiquartists-planet-meteor-magazine-7-copiee et culturelle du Moyen-Orient. Ces sculptures hiéroglyphiques, de 25 à 30 centimètres de hauteur chacune, ont été réalisées en Israël à partir d’étain, de cuivre, de cuivre doré et de bois.

Pour l’occasion, une semaine avant le début de l’exposition, l’artiste avait même réalisé une nouvelle installation de grandes sculptures en bois.

Ces œuvres donnaient, en substance, une synthèse du travail effectué par l’artiste, au cours des trois années précédentes, des thèmes et des styles qu’il utilisait de manière récurrente.

Mélange de passion et de logique, ces sculptures en bois et en métal représentent, dans la carrière d’Aarale, un changement de direction.

Si sa quête d’inspiration sptelechargement-2irituelle est née de sa découverte des richesses de l’Egypte ancienne, l’artiste a toutefois puisé la plupart de ses sources de création dans des cultures plus proches de lui, principalement en Israël.

Ce ne sont pas les monuments architecturaux colossaux historiquement associés à ces civilisations antiques qui ont captivé l’imagination de Ben-Arie, mais les concepts transcendantaux qui y sont profondément ancrés. Les hiéroglyphes, les mythes et les légendes donnant de l’univers une interprétation séculaire ont ouvert à Aarale un passage, duquel ont émergé ses sculptures contemporaines.

Créer des œuvres de petite taille, et les reproduire ensuiteimages-5 à plus grande échelle pour les présenter dans des environnements vastes lui a permis de dépasser ses limites et de réaliser à ce jour quelques-unes de ses plus belles créations.

A suivre

Dr Shirat-Miriam SHAMIR (Docteur en Arts et commissaire d’exposition) paru dans le magazine METEOR

 

Menashe Kadishman (ENG)

Menashe Kadishman

Israeli sculptor and painter Menashe Kadishman passed away this month a year ago (May 2015) at the age of 82. Displayed throughout the world, some of his metal sculptures can be seen in central locations in Israel. He was awarded the Israel Prize for Sculpture in 1995.

The many works produced by the Israeli sculptor and painter Menashe Afficher l'image d'origineKadishman often surprised and bring up to discussion the boundaries
between high art and low art. At the 1978 Venice Biennale, he displayed a live flock of sheep stained blue (a “moving painting”, he called it).

The sheep became for Kadishman another symbol of human sacrifice and the story of the shepherd who turned into an artist became part of his personal story. Kadishman’s large physique, wild beard, loose long white shirt, and sandals enhanced his image of a man of the nature.

 In his youth, he worked as a shepherd on Kibbutz Ma’ayan Baruch – an experience which had a significant impact on his later artistic work.

Résultat de recherche d'images pour "menashe kadishman"In 1995, he began painting hundreds of portraits of sheep, which became his artistic trademark

In his sculptures, Kadishman developed a signature style of cutout silhouettes made of steel, some reaching a height of 6 metres or more, somehow preserving the sensitive qualities of the line drawings from which they derived.

In 1997, the round, open-mouthed faces, made from iron, that had been part of his previous works were accumulated and spread on a gallery floor in Tel Aviv, with the title Shalechet – Hebrew for fallen leaves. This work grew and was exhibited elsewhere, culminating in a permanent installation of 20,000 pieces in Daniel Libeskind’s Jewish Museum in Berlin. Walking on the metal heads – as there is no other way of seeing it – is an unforgettable experience.

Afficher l'image d'origineKadishman experimented with works exploring the relationship between nature and art. A series of environmental works, The Forest (Montevideo, Uruguay, 1969; New York Central Park, 1970; Haus Lange Museum, Krefeld, Germany, 1972) combined man-made yellow plates with the natural environment. Going one step further, he painted a tree in yellow organic paint (Jerusalem, 1972).

His sculpture spanned two different trends in the art of the second half of the 20th century. The first, concerned with its own form, materiality and gravity, peaked in the mid-1960s to mid-1970s, especially in Britain and the US, and Kadishman was a fluent contributor. Examples include the minimalist aluminium and glass sculpture Segments (1968) at the Museum of Modern Art in New York; the yellow painted Suspense (1966) at the entrance to the Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Uprise (1967-74) in the Habima National Theatre Square, Tel Aviv; and Suspended (1968-76) at the Storm King Art Center, New York.

The other trend, from the early 1980s, related to art as a carrier of meaning: myths, memories and narratives, personal and collective. The sacrifice of Isaac was a major theme in Kadishman’s sculpture of the 1980s, which developed from the paintings of sheep he had started doing in 1979 and continued until his last days.

In the early 1990s he began a poignant series of works on a theme rarely approached by a male artist: birth. In these works the child is brutally detached, head down, from the mother’s body in a moment of mutual pain.

Kadishman was born in Tel Aviv to Bilha, a teacher and painter, and Ben Zion Kadishman, an industrial worker and sculptor, who emigrated from Ukraine in the early 1920s. He received his first artistic training from 1947 to 1950 with the sculptor Moshe Sternschuss, one of the founders of the modernist art group New Horizons, and then with the sculptor Rudi Lehmann, known for his sculptures and prints of animals.Afficher l'image d'origine

In 1959 Kadishman went to London to study at St Martin’s School of Art, at the time the hub of the New Generation of British sculptors led by Anthony Caro. After a year or so he moved to the Slade School of Art and studied with Reg Butler. The transition of British sculpture from the figurative and mythical tendencies of the 1950s to the abstract, industrial-influenced works of the 1960s is apparent in Kadishman’s early sculpture as he replaced bronze and stone with aluminium, glass and steel.

The curator of his 1965 first solo show in London’s Grosvenor Gallery, Charles S Spencer preferred to link his work to the artist’s native land, Israel ‘with its harsh, linear landscape, vast deserts (sic!), bare mountain ranges’ and to his ‘Hebraic attitude’. In 1967 Kadishman won the first prize for sculpture at the 5th Paris Biennale for young artists and in 1968 participated in Documenta 4 in Kassel, Germany.

Afficher l'image d'origineBeing a foreign artist in Britain was not easy in those days, as Kadishman related in the 2011 book on his sculptures by Marc Scheps. Being Israeli, without a British passport, prevented him from participating in official exhibitions, a painful experience that made him feel as if he did not belong in art circles. But it also had a liberating effect: “I suddenly understood that whether I followed or did not follow a certain trend, or was or was not influenced by a certain artist, my work emanated from within me – with no passports, permissions and accepted notions.”

The figure of the donkey emerged as a central feature in Kadishman’s most recent work. As the common Middle Eastern beast of burden, it expresses the agricultural society in which he grew up. But the donkey is also the animal that Abraham left behind at the foot of the mountain as he climbed with Isaac to the sacrifice. Finally, according to Jewish tradition the Messiah will arrive at the gates of Jerusalem on the back of a white donkey, signifying the end of bloodshed and sacrifice.

Afficher l'image d'origineIn 1965 he married Tamara Alferoff, a British psychotherapist, and they had two children, Ben and Maya. In 1972, they separated and he returned to Israel. His career prospered in the following years, both in Israel and internationally. In 1995 he was awarded his country’s highest honour, the Israel Prize.

He is survived by his children and six grandchildren.

Dr. Shirat-Miriam SHAMIR (Docteur en Arts et commissaire d’exposition)